John Wood

Eagle Pelts – Ithaca, 1984. by John Wood. Silver print with toning. 16 x 20. Copyright by John Wood.

In an act of great generosity, John Wood’s daughter, Carol Wood, contacted us by e-mail in 2022 and offered to give us our choice of any one of John’s photographic prints – apparently simply because we had championed John’s work when he was still alive. As we had sent everything by John that we had previously owned (Including another copy of this print.) to the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas in Austin as part of the “Creative Project” in 2018, this allowed us to replace the print which we had loved. As well as being a beautiful photograph, it was also the image for the first page of the sixteen page original artist’s signature that John, like the other three artist’s in the collaboration, had chosen to make for the Project. Thus the print held an extra meaning for us.

John’s Story by William S. Johnson
The first and most lasting impression one takes from John is his quietness. John is now eighty-four years old, and his once trim, straight posture has been hampered by an illness that leaves him slightly canted. He also wears hearing aids now. And his voice, never loud, is even softer than it was twenty years ago. But John was always quiet and it has always seemed that his quiet came from a thoughtful calm tied to his subtle sense of balance and order. His dress, manner, and conversation still suggest the self-effacing competence that has traditionally characterized the classic New England character, and John does display many of those attributed characteristics. He listens more than he talks. He is reluctant to discuss his personal opinions casually and only when pressed will he express his thoughts on a subject. He is soft-spoken and misses being laconic only through a natural generosity that forces him to share ideas and ideals with others when he is requested to do so. John is firm in his conviction about public issues such as protecting the natural environment and ending nuclear proliferation, and he practices those beliefs within his everyday actions – but he will never tell you how to act or what to believe. In conversation, John uses a language and style of discussion that is open, non-coercive, and reasoned, even to the point of diffidence. When John is forced to talk about himself, he turns the discussion to his work instead. Even there, in an era when artists are often expected and frequently required to explain themselves and their work, John says little to force any specific direction for the reading of his work.

John’s heritage, his family, and portions of his upbringing during the 1930s and 1940s did, in fact, take place in New England. John, the second of three sons, was born in Delhi, California in 1922. But his father had come from an established New England family. The Woods were among the first settlers of Concord, Massachusetts. Members of the family still owned land in and around Concord when John was growing up. John’s father’s family was large, established and reasonably well-off; they held the tradition that the men would go into engineering or the professions. John’s father, however, loved the land and he studied agricultural sciences at the University of Connecticut. After graduating in the early 1920s, he moved his wife and children to California to homestead a ranch there. But the post-war depression in produce markets plus several years of continued drought burned up that dream, and others that followed. After the ranch was lost the family returned to the east just as the Great Depression was settling into the country at large. So John grew up in a family that lived on the unsettled edge of hard times, never quite as desperate as some, but always needing a little help from the more successful and established members of his extended family. While John was growing up, his own family lived with the maternal grandparents in Kinston, North Carolina, then with his uncle near Rochester, New York, then with John’s paternal grandmother in Concord, Massachusetts. The family also lived briefly in other places as well. John attended nine different schools before he reached the eighth grade.

We were all over the place during the Depression. My father tried to manage a number of farms during that time, but it didn’t work so well. We moved to North Carolina
[where John’s mother’s family lived] where I went to school from the first grade to the third grade. Then we moved to Rochester, New York, and then to a raspberry and potato farm in western New York State, then back to North Carolina. At times it got bad…

I moved too much to make many friends. Because it was always a new situation, I retreated, I backed away. I was uncomfortable socially, and that has lasted through to this day. But I felt comfortable when I was out in nature.

My mother was a great reader and she read to me a lot. When I was young I wound up with an entire set of books by Ernest Thompson-Seton, who was an artist/naturalist. They had these nice, small illustrations. They were very important to me; I read them often. Except for my father, nature was more influential on me than any other thing when I was young.

Before we moved to New England we lived in North Carolina for several years. My mother’s father was a civil engineer and her family ran a piano factory in Kinston, a tobacco town. My grandfather spent a lot of time in Africa getting ivory for the piano keys and he had a lot of tales about that. But Kinston was difficult for me… However, after a year, we moved to Swansboro, which was a little fishing village on the coast. I was about eight or nine and Swansboro was a very interesting place. All kinds of things happened to me there that have to do with motion or water. The entire system there was meaningful to me. The fact of the South, the facts of Swansboro itself, a small fishing village with no electricity during the Depression, the experiences that I had there in relation to the water…. We went boating a lot, it was a very rich fishing ground then — it’s depleted now — but at that time it was very good and I became aware for the first time of all the different things that happened — fishing with gill nets for mullet, going out at night with torches to get flounder, reaching down into holes to get rock crabs.  We would go off and do things…it was an adventure.


[The core of this essay has been adapted from Horses, Sea Lions, and Other Creatures: Robert Frank, Dave Heath, Robert Heinecken and John Wood, by Susan E. Cohen and William S. Johnson. Belmont, MA: Joshua Press, 1986, 242 pp., 36 slides. This was a privately printed, limited edition book produced as one part of the artists’ collaboration , observed by Susie Cohen and Bill Johnson. Unless otherwise credited, all quotations from John Wood are drawn from a number of conversations with him by Susie Cohen and Bill Johnson during 1983-1985 during the course of this project. These were supplemented with several additional interviews with John in 1992 and in 2006.]

“For a time Louise [John’s mother] and the three boys, Norman (“Nonny”), John, and Jimmy, lived in Swansboro, North Carolina, near her sister Jenny who operated a small restaurant. Norman [John’s father] stayed up north to find work and irregularly sent down money. In Swansboro, Louise was particularly distressed with the schools and the poor atmosphere available for the boys. John remembers those years as difficult and fraught with tension, yet he loved the seaside landscape and the life of the small fishing village. He has strong visual memories from this home.

[Another source of information and quotes is the “Monograph on the Work of John Wood – Artist and Teacher,” by Laurie Sieverts Snyder, M. F. A. Thesis, Department of Art Media Studies, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Syracuse University, 1987. 69 pp. p. 7.]

There was a church for blacks across the street where we lived. Sometimes I would sit (hide) in the bushes behind and listen to the singing. I was nine (?) and the church was in a small fishing village in North Carolina. No black person was allowed in the village after sunset. Maybe they were more white in God’s sun and day. There was a bridge that crossed the Neuse River and connected it to a small sand island. At rip tide the water under the bridge was almost violent. I would walk across on the railing. Often we crossed to the sand island for a picnic. My first look at death was on that island. I found a man in the water. He had been dead for a long time and was black. His skin had changed to white in many places. I sat and looked fro a long time and I think I felt compassion for the first time. I know I was sad for another human being. I ran back across the bridge in some terror and told the man at the drug store. Later I found out that a black man had been murdered. Nothing was ever done about it. I didn’t understand. I never talked to my mother about that. My father was in the north trying to find work. (1932, maybe) My aunt ran a restaurant in town. My uncle was no help – he was usually drunk and often violent and I was afraid of him. One day he brought a black bear cub into the restaurant. I never found out what happened to the mother and I don’t know what finally happened to the cub. I did notice that he was very gentle with the cub. There was a lot of violence in that town smoothed and hidden by kindness. I just began to think about this.

[LSS “Monograph.” Unpublished letter, JW to LSS, postmarked 5 March 1985. pp. 7-8.]

This passage reveals many aspects of John Wood’s personality. In retrospect, this memory marks the first self-conscious moment when John felt compassion for another human being outside of the family constellation. This compassion or caring remains an integral element in John’s personality: it is present in his art work, in his relationship to his friends and students, and his concern for people in distress. The awareness that nothing was done to find the cause of death and the murderer was a lesson about the racial inequalities in that North Carolina town, and even as a small boy he realized this. Another important element in John’s childhood was his pleasure in the outdoors. Exploring alone was exhilarating and educational. To keep his mother from excessive worry about his safety, (Like tightrope walking the bridge rail across the riptide channel to the island) John developed the habit of not telling her what he did. Keeping his actions and thoughts to himself allowed John to develop independence and confidence in his own abilities to explore and observe. He found pleasure in his own company and he liked to look “for a long time.” He still does. He looks leisurely at everything: the landscape, work in museums, student’s work, his own work….”

[LSS “Monograph.” pp. 7-9.]

“The issues of subdued violence comes up frequently in John Wood’s memories….There were silent tensions between Louise and Norman. John remembers no angry conversations, but he does remember his father’s silences and absences and his mother’s complaints and worries. The anxieties in the home were never discussed with the boys – yet the intensity of feelings were present, covered over by “kindness” and silence. The notion that unpleasantness might not exist if you did not talk about it was strongly present in John’s childhood and replays itself over and over again. Compassion, careful looking, keeping your feelings to yourself, and enjoying the environment were enduring qualities developed by John in his childhood.”

[LSS “Monograph.” p. 9.]

“The marriage [of Louise Cheney Wood] to Norman Wood was not happy. After all the uprootings and insecurities, and finally moving to Concord to live with her domineering mother-in-law, she decided to divorce Norman in 1942. At the time of the divorce, John was an adolescent and doesn’t remember a great deal of fighting or major family discussions centered around the divorce. After the divorce, Louise had several jobs…”

[LSS “Monograph.” p. 11.]

John spent his high school years in Concord. Concord was a town that rode out the Depression better than many other parts of the country and John’s acquaintances and friends in school always seemed to have more money than he did. The Woods were a large, close family, and they provided John with much companionship, but he always felt that he was the poor relation, the son of the son who had not followed the correct direction or who had had the bad luck.

It was a nice family. My grandparents had four boys and one daughter. There were lots of cousins around and there were always family activities going on. I remember everyone always getting together. And I had a cousin, Hank Coolidge, who was wonderful. He took all us kids skiing and mountain climbing, and he was a wonderful storyteller. He was the first adult outside of my parents that I had any real attachment to.

I was brought up in a good New England family where you always did something artistic – but the Lord help you if you did it seriously.  My mother and my father’s brother were accomplished musicians. My mother’s family manufactured pianos at one point. On my father’s side, my grandfather was a wonderful family photographer. He documented all the family occasions, at any family gathering the old folding Kodak would come out and he would make portraits of all the kids. My aunt was a painter and a fairly good one, but never really committed to that. She taught Physical Education at the University of Connecticut. My dad became a freelance carpenter and cabinetmaker when the farming didn’t work out, and he worked as a patternmaker at the Navy shipyards in Chelsea. He made beautiful little watercolors all his life. I was aware of artists from a very early age. My great uncle was Thomas Hill, and a number of his paintings were in my grandmother’s living room.

Thomas Hill was an accomplished and successful painter working at the end of the 19th century. His best-known painting, “The Last Spike” (1881), commemorating the building of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869, hung in the rotunda of the California State Capitol for many years. John has a very fine painting of Yosemite Valley that Thomas Hill painted as a wedding present for John’s grandmother.

I took my first drawing class at the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester. It was a Saturday morning class and I must have been in the third or fourth grade. I don’t remember any of the paintings at the museum, but I do remember that there was a photo show there and that I kept a catalog of that show for years.

I made watercolors when I was growing up; at some point I even took a watercolor course and a “How-to-Draw” course one summer down on Cape Anne. I liked to draw and I also made photographs all through high school.

I knew that there was such a thing as an artist but I didn’t connect that with me. I didn’t have any sense that it was possible to be an artist. It was possible to make watercolors and things like that but I don’t think I really knew what an artist was until later.

My mother and father were very sympathetic for creative work and they were supportive from the very beginning. But it was harder with the rest of the family. My uncles and my grandmother were demanding and disciplined people; they expected you to amount to something. I always got the feeling that it was necessary to do something important in the world, and art didn’t count. It was a kind of Puritanism… All my uncles were engineers. My father and one uncle tried to get out from under that, but they didn’t quite make it. They spent their energies getting out, and they didn’t have enough left to do anything else…. So there was a lot of art in the family but somehow I felt that it wasn’t open to me.

When I graduated from high school there was a great need for industrial draftsmen, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was offering a program to train high school graduates in drafting. It was a competitive program, but I was accepted into it. It was a short, intensive course that combined mechanical drawing, calculus, and physics. I went through that course, became a draftsman, and then worked at the Raytheon Company in Waltham for a while, then drafting for Sturgis Architects in Boston.

In 1941, I volunteered for the Air Force. I was nineteen, and for a normal kid growing up in our society at that time that was the only thing to do and that’s what I did.

John was commissioned as an officer and trained as a bomber pilot in the Air Force. His first assignment was to the Training Command, where his task was to verify that the new pilots and bombardiers knew their jobs.

“The Air Force gave him an opportunity to explore new areas of the United States: he was trained in California, Arizona, Texas, then stationed in Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, Nebraska. He learned to fly a variety of large and small planes, and he spent most of his four years teaching pilots to fly…. He never saw active [combat] duty – a situation that was both a relief and a disappointment. He was an excellent trainer and he started to develop attitudes towards teaching that would prove helpful ten years later when he started teaching art. A hallmark of John’s teaching style is an ability to allow a student to find his way, to make mistakes and find his own solution. Wood explained to me that this was a lesson he learned repeatedly in the Air Force; the student pilot can only learn to fly by flying, so the flight instructor has to let go, allow the trainee to fly, even to make mistakes, and to solve them.”

[LSS “Monograph.” p. 12.]

Later he trained to fly a B-17 bomber for combat, but the war in Europe ended before he was assigned overseas. He then was reassigned to fly the B-29 bomber, but before he finished training for that aircraft, the war with Japan ended. His last task in the Air Force was ferrying B-29’s down to Texas for mothballing. He was demobilized at Lowrey Field in Denver, Colorado in 1945.

 I loved to fly; I was intrigued by the whole business, the entire kinetics of flying is like skiing… The Air Force wasn’t a wasted time for me because of the special and kinetic characteristics of flying; the ways that you perceive perspective, the way that things line up from the air, and the importance of these things all influenced me a great deal. For a long time I was unaware of those influences, but I know now that they were very important for me. My experiences determined a lot of the ways that I go about organizing things. The idea of a static one point perspective had always been uncomfortable for me and my experiences while flying let me escape from that concept a little bit.

I separated from the Air Force in 1945 in Denver. I spent the first winter just bumming around, skiing and such, and then I enrolled in the University of Colorado on the G.I. Bill.

John studied architectural engineering at the University of Colorado, seeking a discipline that would satisfy his own interests and still be viewed as practical and acceptable by his family. But he soon began to feel that the technically-oriented program at the university was not for him.

It was totally provincial. A lot was happening in structural architecture and design. Buckminster Fuller, Nervi, Mallart, and others were doing a lot in those fields, but I didn’t hear anything about it at the school. So I didn’t even know about those issues at that time. I came home at Christmastime a year later and I just never went back.

John moved back to Massachusetts where he lived with his mother in Boston. The city offered him personal freedom and cultural nourishment. He started a small commercial photographic studio (Anderson & Wood Photography: Aerial & Commercial) in Concord with his high-school friend, Bill Anderson, who had been a Marine Corps fighter pilot during the war. Bill and John began their business by flying a Piper Cub around Concord, taking aerial photographs of commercial greenhouse farms “with a Speed Graphic that we stuck out the door.” They then sold their work to the businesses they had photographed. In time they began to do portraiture and other commercial work as well.

I had been taking photos since I was twelve, but Bill and I both took a course on studio portraiture from a photographer named Shaw, I think, on Newbury Street in Boston. He had been a student of William Mortensen and he had all the print retouching techniques that Mortensen was famous for, but his original negatives were clean and well-made and we got a good technical training in lighting and negative making. The idea of Mortensen is a little embarrassing to me but I did keep the idea of reworking prints from that experience. And later, at the Institute of Design, when I got used to cutting up images and fitting them together on the page with typography, these things led into collage techniques in a very natural way.

As John worked over the next few years in his and Anderson’s studio, he gradually developed and fostered an interest in contemporary art and in creative photography.

I wasn’t aware of art photography, just what I’d seen in the magazines, photojournalism and the like. I feel that there was a real lag in my awareness, almost ten years of my life. In a way I consider myself, in terms of contact and influences, to be ten years younger than I am. I wandered around Boston in my spare time taking photographs. I was a street photographer for a time; it seemed necessary for me to do that, but I didn’t know where it was going to lead.

“Whenever he could, John looked at pictures. In 1949 he bought his first Rolliflex twin lens reflex camera for his own pictures and had his own, “very junky” enlarger in his mother’s Boylston Street apartment. In addition to the photography classes [with Shaw] he took drawing and watercolor classes and later he took night classes at Boston University in aesthetics and psychology. His relationship with his mother was very pleasant. He enjoyed the location of her apartment because he could walk to the museums and the Boston Public Library.”

[LSS “Monograph.” p. 14.]

I began to look for connections. I read some magazines like
U.S. Camera and American Photography, and I went over to the Boston Public Library and looked for books. They had an excellent collection of books on photography. That’s where I discovered Edward Weston and then Paul Strand’s portfolio on Mexico.

About 1948 or 1949 I saw an exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art in New York which was the first time I’d ever seen actual [creative] photographs. Some things were happening in creative photography and some people were out there but I didn’t know anything about it. My first contact [with contemporary art] was also through books. I remember very distinctly being in love with Kandinsky’s work, which I knew through the little Skira book. I didn’t have any friends who were artists, and the museums around Boston didn’t show much abstract work then — that movement was just getting started — except the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston which was open at this time. I remember hearing Oskar Kokoschka talk at his exhibit. I even took his portrait and had ideas of photographing other painters.

I was getting tired of the commercial studio and I was really ready for a change when I found Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s
Vision in Motion in the library one day. I think that you discover people [as influences] once you’ve discovered it in yourself. Moholy-Nagy came to me after I’d already worked some of the ideas out for myself. But Vision in Motion really connected for me, and somehow I learned that Moholy-Nagy had set up the Institute of Design in Chicago.

I married Suzanne Watson in the Spring of 1950, and the idea of my stopping working in the studio became even stronger since the business wasn’t big enough to support both Bill’s family and mine. That summer we drove out to California to visit Zanne’s father. On the way I stopped at I. D., applied, and was accepted into the program.

John was twenty-seven years old. He had amassed considerable practical experience and had had brief contact with a broad range of art forms, but he still had not considered art a valid career. When he enrolled in the program at the Institute of Design in Chicago, he and Suzanne began living in a converted store-front. A colleague of his from that time, Ray Martin, recalls:

John Wood was especially important to those of us whose interests extended beyond commercial design to the fine arts…I was influenced by his experimental approach to art and design. …What made his presence at the school more impressive was the fact that he set up a complete living and working space in [the store front].  He had a photo darkroom, type cases and platen press, proof press, etching press, work tables, etc.  Because of John’s generosity, many students spent time there, talking, working, glad to be part of his creative realm.”

[Quote from LSS “Monograph.” p. 15.]

At I.D. I trained to be a visual designer, I wasn’t training to be an artist. I had practical issues to consider, like how to make a living. Even during the program it didn’t dawn on me that that was a way I could go. But when I got to I. D., I began to meet artists. Harry Callahan was the first person who impressed on me the idea that you could commit yourself to some kind of thing that was called “art.” Several people at I.D. were real artists — Callahan, Siskind, Hugo Weber (a painter), Misch Kohn (a printmaker) — and for the first time I began to get a feeling for what that meant. Even at that point I was choosing between different media; I started in photography but then I went into typography, print making, and design. I didn’t really know what I wanted to do but I was beginning to try to decide.

I knew Harry Callahan, but Aaron [Siskind] got there after I switched away from photography so I never took any classes with him, although I did get to know him. There was a young fellow from Denmark, Keld Helmer Petersen, who had published a book of color photographs — very abstract — who was teaching there, and that was the first color work like that that I had seen. Remember that everything was still isolated in those days, in the early 1950s, a small number of books were out. Maybe if you were really into things in New York City, then you might have known what was really going on, but otherwise it was pretty scattered.

Harry Callahan had his first show at the Art Institute of Chicago the first year that I was there and I think that that was the first photo show that they had there. Frederick Sommer came in for a week to teach and I was impressed by him. Art Sinsabaugh taught there as well, but I had become interested in printmaking by then.

There was a three-semester foundation course that everyone from graduate students to people just out of high school had to take, and a lot of the people were veterans, so it was a pretty lively group. Just because of the group that was there then, we became very interested in printmaking and we set up some presses and all that. That group consisted of Ray Martin, Ivan Chermayeff, Michael Traine, Norman Kantor, Marty Moskov, and others. Len Gittleman was a good friend of mine.
[Len Gittleman was a photographer and filmmaker who taught the still photography courses offered to the undergraduates in the Visual Studies program at Harvard through the 1960s and 1970s.] Len and I made a movie, THE PRESS, about the printing press. It was a nice movie but we had problems clearing copyright on the score that we borrowed from a recording of a work by Stravinsky and we never were able to get it re-scored.

While in his fourth year at school, and still a student, Wood began teaching a course in visual fundamentals at the Institute of Design. John graduated from the Institute in 1954. He had intended to move to San Francisco after graduation, find a job there, then buy a printing press and print his own graphics and books as well as work for other artists. But he was offered a job while still in his last semester at I. D.

In 1954 Charles Harder, the director of the New York State College of Ceramics in Alfred, New York was touring art and design schools in New York and Chicago searching for someone to teach printmaking and typography at Alfred. Alfred University is a small school founded in the 1830s and located in a tiny village in a rural portion of western New York, amid the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains. The school has always had a strong arts program and its New York College of Ceramics was highly regarded. Harder visited the Institute of Design during John’s last semester there, and, on the recommendation of the I. D. faculty, offered the position to John.

“At the time, the Alfred program was narrowly focused on industrial design, “pottery production,” and teaching, although it had continued its original objectives combining scientific, technical, art and practical training.  Charles Harder had become head of the design program in 1944 and, with his beliefs about teaching and education “in hand,” he was searching for a new faculty member.  His search would lead him to New York and to the Chicago’s Institute of Design.  Faculty there recommended John Wood as someone who met the criteria established by Harder.”

Harder’s philosophy and vision is well-documented; a potter would benefit by being taught concepts and skills other than pot-making.  By hiring John Wood and giving him the flexibility to teach what and how he wanted, the program could develop into what it is today.  John Wood brought his experience with foundations from I.D. and his own sensibilities about broadening students’ choices to the program.  He “didn’t want things to be isolated.” (Shefrin, et al.)  The environment of the department nourished an interaction between and among faculty and students that provided the opportunity for creativity and change, invention, and experimentation.

Harder’s belief in the importance to an education program of exposure to high quality media (music, art, design), was the beginning of the change process, but its form and success can be credited (in large part) to John Wood’s philosophy, creativity, adherence to specific values.  Harder had selected Wood on the basis of these traits; the person and the environment were a good match.”

[Wood, Carol. “John Wood…” Unpublished Essay, 1997. 6 pp.]

When I first got to Alfred I was just going to teach one class. It was nice for me to be earning a real salary after so long. I really loved teaching and I still do. I have a great deal of difficulty with the bureaucracy in schools and with the interpersonal politicking that goes on, but I like the teaching. ‘Zanne and I decided to stay for four years and take one class through the school… but, for one reason or another, we’ve been here ever since.

“Changes were often brought about because of Wood’s own personal experimentation and desire for ways to manipulate and move images.  For example, his experience in Chicago had included work at a graphic design company doing big posters.  When he arrived in Alfred, he really wanted to continue that work but had to develop the technology here in order to keep it going.  He describes adapting a photo-silkscreen process in order to combine photography and lithography, and building a complex system for developing movie film.  Through his work and exploration, the crossing of media happened.  (Shefrin, et al.)

The course in visual design was conceptualized and taught as a foundation program–Wood was left to his own devices about what to teach. Again, his quiet commitment to typography and photography led him to provide his own equipment so that the students could explore those media.  He did not serve in an administrative position; from the start he effected change from the classroom. As early as 1955, one year after he arrived, the curriculum was changing to offer a “track” considered fine arts, for the first time, rather than strictly design.”

[CW. “John Wood.” p. 3.]

“When he arrived at Alfred John taught visual design, typography, book design and printmaking. However, for his own work he wanted photographic facilities and this he set up with his own equipment at the college. The students became interested in photography so he started teaching photography on his own time. When he started to have as many students in his photography classes as there were in the ceramics classes, Ted Randall, chairman of the art department, suggested they start a photography program.”

[LSS “Monograph.” p. 18.]

“By 1965 the Department of Design became the Department of Art — “reflecting more accurately its work and activities” (NYSCC Annual Report 1965, Appendix F)  In the period of time between the first mention of fine arts and the structural shift to the Department of Art, Wood’s ideas about visual design permeated the program.  The first team-taught course, however, was almost accidental.  Eric Renner (faculty member during the late Sixties) who taught 3-D studies, and John Wood decided to teach their classes together.  Wood remembers this as an historical event, and also as an exciting, collaborative time period in the history of the school.”

[CW. “John Wood.” p. 3.]

“The BFA Program in Photography “…began in 1970 in response to the need and demand for such a concentration… and by 1977 was offering five courses to about one hundred and sixty students each year…”

[“Video History Project: Resources: Groups: Alfred University.” http://www.experimentaltvcenter.org/history/groups/gtext.php3?id=3. (Aug. 22, 2006).]

There is a thread of tension running through John’s quiet narrative of his early life; a sense of pressures felt and possibilities denied. Alfred must have seemed like an unexpected turn in the road, and possibly something of a haven. Suddenly John had the opportunity to live amidst the type of countryside he loved. At the same time he was permitted –even encouraged- to unleash the suppressed creativity that had always been a part of him.

And John did exactly that. He taught at Alfred with care and commitment for nearly thirty-five years, until his retirement in 1987. Former students of John’s, at all levels of accomplishment and commitment, respond with affection at the mention of his name. In a statement published when she was appointed Dean at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2006, E. Jessie Shefrin began her list of important influences with John Wood’s name.

[“New York State College of Ceramics. College News. Veteran art professor leaves to become dean at Rhode Island School of Design.” http://www.alfred.edu/nyscc/view.cfmemp=2195 (Aug. 22, 2006)]

Shefrin had earlier stated John’s importance to the teaching program and its students at Alfred in a ceremony honoring him at the reopening of the design study studios at the school in 1995.

He came to Alfred in 1955.  He came as an artist, to teach and to learn.  He left in 1987 to continue to teach and to learn.  He is teaching something right now by being here.  He is teaching something about re-turning, about re-making, about re-visioning.  He is teaching about being present.  And don’t look now because he is probably doodling on a napkin that will probably find its way into a book, which we will probably end up buying in a few years for our rare book collection.

And that’s the way things go with John. One thing turns into something else right in front of your eyes and often without words.  So, you have to pay attention.  You have to learn how to listen visually.  You have to learn how to get your own attention, or you might not hear the voice of Black Elk speaking to you about Wounded Knee on December 12, 1890 in one of John’s drawings.  You might not notice the small article in today’s paper on page twelve about the thousands of Rwandans murdered by government forces in a makeshift refugee camp.  You might not stop on your way home to look up and see the woodcock circling above your head about to dive down, telling you it is spring.  You might miss the connections.

And that’s the way things go with John.  They connect.  Sometimes now.  Sometimes then.  Sometimes here.  Sometimes there.  Sometimes circuitously — sometimes so clearly and simply that nothing can be said, and you are left dumbfounded, not knowing how you got here or where you’re going but knowing that something profound has just happened to you.

In recognition of all the small and indestructible gifts that you, John, have given to the many people who are seated before you now and the many people who couldn’t be here, to the students in all the studios in this school working right now, who aren’t here, because they aren’t alumni yet but who somehow feel who you are, because the gifts get passed on.  They get passed on in the tools that get made and used.  In the vessels that hold tusche.  In the lines drawn around the bend, on the top of the hill.  In the light that gets captured in a moment and then gets reprocessed 20 times, 20 different ways.  In the moving images that spur dreams.  In the marks that float off the pages and turn into angles of repose.  In knowing that to get to a place you have never been, you must go by a road you have never taken.

We celebrate the opening of our new studio facilities by naming them not after you, not for you, but in the spirit of you.  And in so doing, we challenge ourselves to create open studios where ideas, energy and conversation can move freely up and down the stairs, around the corners and across the building; to be mindful of the boundaries, the borders and the territories that come with doors that lock; to re-dedicate ourselves to the practice and joy of teaching and its intricate relationship to the living process of making work.

We offer you all our love and all our thanks.”

[CW.”John Wood.” p. 1. Quoting from pp. 4-5 in VITA (alumni publication) School of Art and Design, Alfred University, 1995-1996.]

“When Wood retired in 1988, former students and faculty were invited to write their “testimonials” for presentation to him at the formal retirement dinner.  The response was overwhelming; testimonials were sent in from all parts of the country and from every generation of alumni.  Writings, drawings and photographs were included in the packets; demonstrating the impact John Wood had on their lives.”

[CW. “John Wood.” p. 4.]

Yet in 1984, when the Society for Photographic Education asked John to be the “Honored Speaker” at its annual meeting, John hesitated for several weeks before accepting the honor; for he was neither a member of the SPE, nor was he certain that the honor should come to him.

John had participated in the Invitational Teaching Conference at the George Eastman House held in November 1962 which was one of the seminal meetings leading to the formation of the Society for Photographic Education. And John sat on three of the panels presented during the conference. When asked why he did not join the new organization; John simply shrugged and said, “Those things are difficult for me. I attended once in a while, but I don’t particularly like organizations.” Later, choosing to expand his answer, he continued:” I don’t have an intellectual relationship to photography, I like to read about it, but...” In response to the statement that he made very smart photographs, he said, “Those are two different things.” When pushed a little further, he stated his philosophy of teaching.

I’ve been teaching now
[1984] for thirty-one years and that’s occupied a lot of my energies. The first five years at Alfred I was learning how to teach. I guess I’m a good teacher partly because I listen and I’m also willing to meet the student exactly where he or she is. I don’t impose my philosophy on the student. I try to have them discover their own position. If I would take pride in anything it would be that I feel all too often that some people will go to a person’s work and say why didn’t you do this or that, but I’d much rather go to the work, find out what’s there, see if I can find out whatever the seed is that’s going on, and then let the student find out what that may be.

Also, I was trained at the Institute of Design, which grew out of the Bauhaus philosophy. And their foundation program was very good and exciting and a lot of my ideas came out of that experience. One of the interesting parts of that philosophy was that it is much better to teach a philosophy of tools and materials rather than a specific tool. And I also happen to believe that process is more important than what the final product looks like. I seem to be good at putting together problems that lead people towards that discovery. A good problem for me is where students at any level, no matter what their background, can approach it equally.

And I’m not cynical with the students either.

I manage to teach one or two workshops every summer. I’ve been doing that for about fifteen years now. I’ve taught at Penland in North Carolina, at Haystack, the Parsons School at Lake Placid, New York, and I’ve taught quite a few summers at the Visual Studies Workshop. I like the workshops, particularly if they are short. It’s a different relationship than in the regular school sessions.

In addition to teaching, John has continued to create his own art with a relentlessness that is only partially hidden by his modest manner and his lack of self-promotion. John creates art continuously, moving across the various mediums of drawing, photography, painting, printmaking, and bookmaking in a process that sifts, reorders and extends the ideas, concepts, and processes that are combined within his organic, elegant body of work. The consistency of this long effort was pointed out by Aaron Siskind in a 1978 interview. Aaron stated, in the context of a conversation about an artist’s concerns with and dedication to the creation of his art, “...more recently, …we have a person like John Wood, whose motivations are of the purest – I mean he’s one of the most dedicated human beings you can find in this world.

[“A conversation between Aaron Siskind and Diana Johnson,” Spaces. Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R.I., 1978, p. 15.]

Although John will freely explain how any specific work that he has created was generated, he usually does not care to discuss any meanings that it might have. He becomes uneasy if either he or someone else starts to interpret any pieces in terms of a specific, thus limiting, critical framework. He is more articulate and at ease when he is discussing his own discoveries and the directions he has chosen to follow to create his art. The free-flowing form of such a discussion, pausing at one point for an embellishment, jumping to another point to add a highlight or some coloration to his discourse, is in itself a most apt delineation of the evolution and dimensions of his creative process.

I’ve been accused of spreading myself thin and I admit to it. My studio is full of the different directions that I travel, which range from purely abstract exploration to image making of one sort or another. I cut through several mediums. I do go through a whole range of things. I’ll do one thing, then that will lead to another, then to another. It’s hard for me to say where things stop. I’ll make a collage which leads to a montage which leads to the next thing and so on…my objects are always going through different transformations.

John will photograph a pile of pebbles he had gathered and placed outside his studio to break the runoff of the rain from his porch roof. He may make a silver print from that negative, then later make a xerox enlargement from that print and use that xerox as a negative to generate a cyanotype contact print, which, in turn, may be collaged into a larger work with other prints or drawings, or combined with handmade paper, or maybe bound into an artist’s book. And the image may appear in a different form or a different configuration in another work the following week, or the following month, or five years later.

I’m continually recycling things; I hate to throw anything away. I’ll recycle images back and forth for a long time until eventually I get embarrassed that a particular image is showing up so often. Then I’ll remove it. When I’m making a piece and I’m in the process of searching for something I need in my studio — a negative or a particular print or whatever — quite often I come across something else. It’s a kind of continual process that goes on. It can get exasperating if I can’t find what I’m looking for, but I don’t object because a lot of my images grow out of that search. It looks chaotic but the process works for me. I’ll start over here at this spot [in my studio] and then on the way over there to pick something up I’ll get stopped by something interesting. I used to fight against that but I don’t anymore. That’s the way I work and it’s where the things that I’m most exited about come from.

John does not claim to have total control over the act of creativity. The idea of process is very much a part of his work. He leaves the work open and the process ongoing to include the viewer as the final link in the creative act.

When I’m putting images together I don’t have a narrative that I’m trying to tell. I locate images randomly and then move them around until I find things that I feel have some relationship to each other. That relationship may be in terms of color, an aspect of geometry, or some sense of how an image works. At some point, if I’m lucky, two or three things will begin to operate: the colors, the formal aspects, or perhaps the shapes. Shape is very strong with me. I like the idea that shapes have a life to themselves which is not a narrative life but some kind of feeling that effects us very strongly. I think these things are universal…


So I play with this material until some kind of connection begins to be made. They certainly are not verbal connections, but some kind of vibrations begin to happen and the pieces begin to echo each other. When I work best things are just flowing out. I trust my subconscious; I think it knows more than my conscious mind does.

The way I work with the doublet collages, for example, it’s like a poetry structure; it’s like Haiku, the form lets you put disconnected things together and the viewer has to connect them for himself. It’s in the connecting that it becomes important.

John was quietly amused when asked if he were religious. He denied any adherence to a particular belief, although he commented that he was impressed by the lifestyle and ideas of Zen Buddhism. Transcendentalism, a philosophy born near 19th century Concord, Massachusetts, with its precepts about the close and quiet observation of nature and the assertion that intuition should dominate empirical experience, also forms the backbone of John’s thought. He has found even more direct influences in people and events closer to his own time.

I started out studying architectural engineering, so I’m very interested in structure. Buckminster Fuller was the first person to make me aware of a different kind of structure that I hadn’t intuited before. He was important to me in the sense that all of his world ideas really hit a chord and so he was a kind of hero for me. I like a lot of the “primary ideas” that he had about things. Fuller was great at distilling things down to one idea. He would start with a little triangle and gradually the whole world would evolve out of that. He preached continually that we have the knowledge to solve our world problems and that we must do so now. He was an optimist. It’s obvious that we have the information; but the work isn’t being done, is it? But Fuller came to I. D. to lecture when I was there. He talked literally for three days straight; the energy was amazing.

The idea of structure informs John’s way of seeing the world. Both his heritage and his training stress systematic thinking and creative solutions to practical problems. At the time he leaves space for the beneficial possibilities of intuition. John feels most comfortable when he senses the presence of a pattern or perceives a congruence within his own art and a system of order within the larger world. He feels best when his work alludes to an interconnectedness within the structures and events of the world. This is apparent in the pleasure John shows when describing the principles behind a model of an icosahedron made by the intersection of three golden rectangles that he built out of card-board and string years ago, which now hangs in a corner of his living room; or at demonstrating an elegant solution to a difficult carpentry problem; or in the little wooden “figures” — balancing tightrope-walking katchina figures, birds, or little fantastic animals he makes as presents for his now grown children — works which display a touch of quiet whimsy and a delicate artisanry hard to match outside of Calder’s Circus.

Much of John’s artwork is set up to demonstrate the rule of some process, or the dominion of a form, or the nature of a structure within the medium, which John then explores or expands through the deft play of his ingenuity. These principles fuel John’s continued interest in the “system drawings” and the folded-paper drawings, as well as his experiments with the multi-framed photograph series.

While John takes pleasure in working with aspects of the materials he uses, which he then can play within and against a continually renewed series of innovative solutions, this is not the sole or even the primary aim of his art. John insists that his works contain combinations of meanings – multiple associations, groupings of visual possibility, personal meaning, and metaphoric potential. In short, he insists that they function as poetry. And, in that context, his continued investigations of the boundaries of rule and the possibilities of intuition take on the dimensions of questioning the boundaries of order and freedom.

Landscape is one of the major sources of nourishment for John and consequently one of the major themes in his art. He has drawn upon several different landscapes over the years. First, there is the landscape that he has lived in for years, the gently rolling hills and rural meadows around Alfred, New York. It is a countryside of farms and reverted farm-lands, with open fields bound by hedgerows of scrub timber and patchwork blocks of deciduous forest. In the summer this country can be beautiful, the meadows full of flowers, butterflies, and birds. The winters are harder, laden with the heavy snowfalls common to the snowbelt on the underside of Lake Ontario. It’s a quiet country. Those parts of John’s work that reflect this landscape are also quiet, private, and gentle.

The light is different in Alfred than in New Mexico and the gestures of the landscape are different and the whole kinetic changes — the wind and the rain, and all the rest of it — is different. And those are the things that I react to. I don’t draw them specifically, but I react to them when they come up. Although the landscapes of Alfred and New Mexico are different, my relationship to them is the same.

It isn’t just that you look out there and see a mountain. It’s how things fluctuate with it. If a gesture is very important to me, if it’s something that moves and so forth, those are my sources to develop from. Sometimes I’ll have a mountain in my drawings, but almost invariably there will also be some situation that moves with it.

The other important landscape for John is the more flamboyant, colorful countryside of northern New Mexico. John fell in love with that country years ago when he and his wife Suzanne camped there while traveling to California. John spent a sabbatical year in Santa Fe in 1965, painting and drawing and establishing contacts with the local people. Since that year John has spent almost every summer in New Mexico. His son, Michael, now lives in Santa Fe with his family. And old friends such as Eric Renner, a colleague of John’s since they taught together at Alfred in the mid-sixties, live in New Mexico as well.
John frequently includes images of his friends in his work; it is one of the ways that the works resonates for him. An important figure which has appeared throughout John’s art during the past years is a portrait of a friend he made on his first visit to New Mexico in 1965.

At some point I was photographing in Chimayo, which is a little Mexican weaving village up in the mountains, and I met this Malacio, who was a Spanish man who had lived there a long time. He’d worked at the YMCA in El Paso for years and years and then retired and moved back up to his home town of Chimayo. I met him and rented a nice little studio room from him that year. I used to go up there three times a week to draw during the entire year that I was out there. I would arrive up there and start down to the studio and Malacio would always come to the door and ask me in for a cup of coffee. I’d go in, have a cup of coffee and we would talk, and then I’d go down to the studio and work.

After that, I’d go out there and rent the studio from him every year until eventually he sold it. He wanted to sell it to me and I wanted to buy it, but it never happened and eventually I figured out that all the deeds are held by the “ditch people” (who run the irrigation ditches) and if I had bought it I would have been one of the first Anglos in there and I think that they just wouldn’t accept that.

Anyway, he was just a wonderful man and we became very good friends. His mother had been an herbalist and the studio room was filled with dried herbs. I would ask him if he knew anything about it and he would always say “no.” But as the years went by he gradually taught me some things, so I learned several good teas and things like that from him.

John has made works in a variety of media that use portraits of Malacio. The portraits frequently are embedded within the New Mexico landscape, or juxtaposed against the New Mexico sky, to convey the interconnectedness of the man and the place.

I relate the indigenous Spanish people to that landscape and the Indians even more strongly because there are still traces from way back. The ruins that you find are Indian. So that part of what’s out there did affect me – it’s a source.

The third landscape valued by John is more metaphorical. It is the landscape of the past history of human creativity. Just as John values the tropes and concepts that allude to the presence of an order in the world, so is he attracted to those traces of past systems of ordering and craftsmanship he finds in the world around him. In the southwest, John is attracted to pictographs, or the patterns on prehistoric pots, or the patterns left by the ruined foundations of an Anasazi dwelling, which are still sitting in the terrain of the present. In New England, John is attracted to the craftsmanship of a ship carpenter’s railing or a weathervane. In every situation he chooses subjects that are intimate in scale, that are specific, and particular. Nothing of the grand vista for him: the vision is always private, the perception is always elegant.   

When John fits together his multilayered collages he is actually fusing a landscape of the past and the present, the terrain and its history, its physical presence and its psychic feeling. Within that structure John will make two major statements. The first is an honoring of certain values, of friendship, or the character of individuals who he knows and likes, or the qualities of intellect and skill that go into the creation of systems of conceptualization and actual works of art, the values of civilization. The second statement is an acknowledgement of the threats to the values and qualities he admires. His “gun in the landscape” series, his references to nuclear disaster, the implications of violence and destruction, are co-opted into his art patterning. These works frequently have a quality of uncertainty about them. John responds to the issues posed within the work with a wry, grim humor.

Drawing is the thing that affects me the most. I’m continually in a state of drawing and no day goes by that I don’t draw something. Mark-making, calligraphy, the kinetic motion of the movement of the hand, are very important to me, probably more important than anything else.

When I go out to New Mexico and draw, I don’t draw what I see. I absorb what I see, and the movement of the landscape, the space, the light, and the colors all come out on the paper. Sometimes it resembles the things out there and sometimes it doesn’t. My abstract work grows out of this as well. The gestures of the landscape are in a lot of my abstract drawings. A lot of my work is horizontal and I think that’s because it grows out of the landscape, which is horizontal for me. A lot of my systems drawings grow out of actual situations.

After I started doing my systems drawings I discovered the Mimbres pottery of the southwest. The designs on that pottery are sometimes crudely drawn but the configurations are always complex and profound. These “primitive” people must have had such a clear sense of order…

Then there are my “self-stenciled drawings,” which are based on the idea of a primary measuring fold, which depends on how many ways that you can fold a sheet of paper…It’s the simplest thing in the world and yet the space becomes very dynamic. These things grow out of some self-determining system.

I suppose that if I had to boil my work down and then do only one or two kinds of art, then I would go for the kinetic drawings and straight photography. I used to have a very nice relationship with photography. It was a peaceful thing that I did. I loved it and I did it, and so forth. Gradually it became a little more intensive. I finally discovered that photography is very hard, in that it’s difficult for me to get the images that I want since it’s such an instantaneous medium. But it’s becoming easy — or at least fun — again.

In photography the place where I discovered that I could work with the issue of any kind of system ideas has been in the multi-framed groups [as in “Nathan Left to Right and Right to Left” or “Self-Portrait Holding a Rope”] where I lined up the frames of the individual prints in ways that broke from a straight forward recording of the subject. Some of my early photographs, the multi-framed pieces, were an attempt to get some kind of kinetic energy into my photography. These weren’t movie making, although I also tried making some short films, but I was just trying to explore the idea that the camera itself could move and that I could move the camera. For a long time this was the most important issue for me and it grew out of my interest in kinetic issues. When I first started doing the multi-framed photographs I wanted my action of taking the picture to become part of the thing. The kinetics of the visual message differ from the kinetics of the taking message…

I had done a number of multiframed images before I went out to New Mexico, but when I was out there I photographed with a 4″ x 5″ and I also had a 35mm camera, and I began to really feel that I wanted the movements that I was making while I was taking the photographs to show up in the photographs themselves. So I began to think about that.
I think about these things [conceptual ideas about the medium] a lot and my sketchbook is full of little ideas about how the frame works and all that sort of thing. But it’s only when these things come together with something that I care about — a person that I know or a situation that I’m interested in — that it becomes interesting to me and I make a photograph. Just the idea by itself is not enough for me.

I think that things have a secondary life. For example, a photograph that is really loved by a lot of people does begin to have a kind of energy that it didn’t have before. And I think, although it’s really difficult to get at, to explain with words, that when a photographer is really concerned about something over a period of time, then that energy begins to enter into his work. And that it is different than someone who takes a pretty picture — I don’t know how — but it’s there in the work. I really think that if some kind of energy is brought to bear in making an image, even in photography, which is the most mechanical of mediums, that it communicates itself somehow.

I think that each artist has to think out the relationship between his work and his use of materials and energy. Each artist is different, and what may be wasteful and overdone for one may be necessary for another.

John lives a lifestyle that, while neither excessively frugal nor unreasonably restricted, is careful and modest in the use of the panoply of consumer goods available in America. His sense of citizenship extends into social and political arenas. He keeps informed on issues, he votes, he knows why he’s voting as he is. He quietly supports the activities of a number of world relief organizations. On those occasions when he has determined that an issue needs more active support, he has expressed his opinions publicly, participating in protests against ecological abuses or the Vietnam War. When social or political issues come into his art however, he is most vigilant that they remain in a controlled fashion, staying in a careful balance with other, visual, concerns.

My life is pretty simple in some ways. I live out here in the country. I think that my life has a number of threads that do interpenetrate each other. I would like to keep those things in balance somehow or other — the environmental and political concerns, my personal life. I don’t sacrifice one at the expense of the other although the concentration of my work may get sacrificed while I’m trying to maintain a balance between all that.

‘Zanne and I were active politically; we support things. But I have to say that I’m becoming more and more non-political as time goes by. But that’s separate from my image concerns; my image concerns are a much harder nut to crack. For example, I would like to have gun control in the United States and I’ve done a whole series of images about “the gun in the landscape,” but they are actually pretty mild, they are often almost whimsical. I feel funny about the fact that they are never very outspoken when I remember some of the earlier photo-collagists such as John Heartfield who used his work like a weapon. I haven’t done that and I don’t know what it means except that my imagery is more on the lyrical side. Maybe we should hang everything up and go out and fight against nuclear proliferation, but so far I haven’t done that. I let the ideas creep into my imagery. I guess I want my photocollages to interact with how I feel about my friends, people I know, and the world. I’m always in argument with myself either to do more or to tend to business.

I did a lot of protest things during the Vietnam war — I started doing collages about 1963 or 1964. I wanted to make how I felt about the war known, and the photocollage seemed to be a wonderful way to do it. I started a series that I call “quiet protests.” I very consciously did not want to create propaganda. Some people exploited all of the emotions associated with the war to their own advantage and I didn’t want to do that, but I wanted to take a stand somehow or other. These “quiet protest” pieces were never vicious and they always have an aesthetic edge to them. There were several images that were probably stronger in their protest but they weren’t as interesting to me because they didn’t meet the boundaries of my aesthetic judgments – I wanted some sense of the whole thing wrapped together.

Since then concerns have become more difficult, and things are more subtle, but they are the same. I’ve made work on the nuclear bomb and on the environment. Environmental things are much harder to get at, but I’m still dealing with them.

I no longer think that I can do photographs that are going to change the Department of Defense, or that my photographs will stop a major corporation from polluting the land and that’s why I maintain my position about abstraction in art. I’m a formalist about my own work. I would maintain that you can say something about your world with abstraction. That’s how you really get at the guts of a thing through your work. If you present some sense of life to somebody else then that’s how you’re doing it. I feel that pretty strongly. My work becomes more and more abstract as I go along. I think that art has its greatest effect when it makes people sensitive to life. And that’s more important than how well or badly images can stir people to immediate political action. That belief gives me the courage to do the kinds of things I do.

In 1970 John published a prose poem in the catalogue for the exhibition 12 x 12 held at the Rhode Island School of Design. The poem outlined his perception of life as a citizen and as an artist.

Thoughts on large numbers
and small
I’m one person and have

two children and
one wife
Some small numbers have
a direct relation to me
35mm tri-X 20 exposures
28mm f2.8 400 ASA
One at a time sometimes
several at a time
one two three
I know how to photograph
my friends and even
begin to know about
small numbers
But I’m part of some large numbers
10 photographs can be
arranged in
3,628,800 different ways
There are 3,200,000,000 people
in the world
many are hungry and
some are not
The last unpolluted air in
the USA was in Flagstaff
six years ago
Rivers catch fire in Cleveland
It takes 50,000 gallons of water
to make one ton of paper
We discard or destroy 20,000,000
tons of paper every year
There are 83 million cars
in the U.S.A.
142 million tons of smoke & fumes
Our highway program destroys
one million acres of oxygen
producing trees and green stuff
Vietnam
Six percent of the world’s people
use sixty percent of the
world’s resources
Large numbers are hard to feel
but the idea is there
no matter how you number it
I’m pleased that Weston followed
his vision in spite of the
depression and that Einstein
knew more about atoms than about politics
But maybe the time has come
for creative photography
to encompass the large
problems without propaganda
or journalism
No answers but I want
the large numbers to
enter my photography


[John Wood, 12×12, Carr House Gallery, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R. I., 1970, n. p.]

And again in 1977, in a statement written for an exhibition held at the Vision Gallery in Boston, John stated his belief in what made the creative act valuable for him.

I would like my pictures to be abstract
and poetic visual images
of friends and the world
no story telling
sometimes slight propaganda and quiet protest
on the edge of clear meaning.


In 1983 John, who had enjoyed his experience while team teaching with Eric Renner, was interested when Susie Cohen and I approached him to participate in another collaborative effort. Our project involved four artists—Robert Frank, Dave Heath, Robert Heinecken and John Wood meeting with us and together with each other several times over a two year span, showing work and exchanging ideas among themselves and with us, then finally all spending a week together in isolation to work out a final collaborative project. An aim of the Project was to try to document the process of creative activity rather than simply display the art product resulting from the creativity. The Project was loosely formed, with the photographers choosing and controlling what, if anything, they wanted to produce.

Ultimately, each of the artists agreed to produce an original sixteen-page signature for an artist’s book. Each did so, and the final product of the project was to be an exhibition and book of those signatures with our supporting texts plus an accompanying exhibition of the signatures as well as a body of related photographs by each artist. “The Project”, as we called it, was supported by Eelco Wolf, then a Vice-President for the Polaroid Corporation in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Wolf was providing support for several innovative artists’ projects leading to exhibitions and books at the time. This support paid for Susie’s and my time, everyone’s travel and incidental expenses, production and exhibition costs, etc. The artists contributed their interest, ideas and time. The project was completed; the exhibition chosen and framed, the book designed and waiting to go to press, when the Polaroid Corporation acquired a new President; who established new and different policies for the company’s corporate support for the arts, and the funding support for this and other projects, over Eelco Wolf’s protests, was withdrawn. 

John’s sixteen-page signature for this project consisted of a nine image sequence of 16” x 20” black and white prints, which, for the book signature, opened with a vertical image page right and ended with a vertical image, page left, with seven double-page spreads of horizontal images sandwiched between. This sequence was later published in 1987; in the exhibition catalog 4 x 4 Four Photographers by Four Writers. Susie Cohen wrote the essay accompanying John’s work in that catalog. Her essay was in two parts. Part I was essentially the statement about John’s work that she had written for the Polaroid Project book. Part II was a discussion of the new photographic sequence itself.

“I. John Wood is an accomplished artist in a dozen media: printmaking, photography, bookmaking, painting, collage, graphic design, sculpture, installation, and a few he has invented combining those listed. “Accomplished artist” implies recognition by a knowledgeable community of a committed artist’s sustained and successful effort. This has some value for John. He is unassuming but not unworldly. The finished work, and the recognition of it are to John as clothing is to the naked body: it protects, it becomes, it provides access to the wearer. It is not, however, the essential spirit of the man. There is one medium that John uses that comes as close as an artifact can to expressing its maker, and that is drawing.

John draws every day without fail. He has described himself during this activity as “being in a state of drawing.” I gather several things from this spare phrase. John uses speech economically. He is succinct because other languages are more nearly equivalent to his feelings, and, in part, because he is shy. His spoken language is not colorful, but neither is it hyped or exaggerated. He conserves with language as he conserves with water and other resources. He says what he means.

“A state of drawing” is something like meditation, a being with the self that for John is neither analytical nor mystical, but during which he gathers and clarifies those forces which allow him to express himself wholly. In a state of drawing his perceptions concentrate as rhythms and then move through his practiced hand to paper.

The majority of sketches and drawings that John makes are abstract. The “systems drawings” use a series of spaced points to determine a symmetrical design, with roughly equal positive and negative spaces, like Mimbres pottery. Other drawings, done outdoors, refer to real objects in the landscape. All the drawings have in common marks that are both loose and certain, qualities that are only superficially at odds. And all of them, at whatever point on the representational-abstract spectrum, resonate with John’s understanding of nature as both mutable and abiding, restless and enduring. The antecedents of John’s drawings are the organic abstractions of Marin, Dove, and O’Keeffe. Some of his lines rustle as in a breeze; others erode; still others merge like rivulets into streams and rivers.

These word images are from my imagination. Perhaps they are too literal for John. But it is as tempting to describe his drawings this way as it is to conjure figures in clouds, or, more to the point, as it is to believe like Steiglitz in equivalences between a man’s being and the multitude forms of nature. I suspect that what I must name to understand, John intuits. The harm in a name is that it freezes the rhythm of a thing, which may be why John seems always in quiet stride and when he is still, he cups his body around a thing as you would cup your hands over a firefly.

John likes to be and work where nature is active, which can be almost anywhere to the tuned eye. He built his studio in a meadow and watches its cycles from a wall-sized window. He wanders a beach not far from home where a skin of white sand covers black sand, and even a casual toe print creates chiaroscuro. He makes drawings in the sand; some wash away, others he photographs. As much as the gentle east coast hills he likes the raw New Mexico landscape. In that crisp light, John draws cactus from their eye-level with bristly colored spikes that show his admiration for the strategy of their form.

It is this last, John’s belief in the relatedness of form and survival in nature and in the possibility of it in the acts of man, that shapes his perception and sets his work apart from a passive, romantic — he might use the word “rosy” — appreciation of nature. The difference, expressed in all his work by rhythmical kinship among elements, in his drawings by the record of his moving hand, is the difference between a view of nature as finite, to be imitated for its solutions and a view of nature as a process, from whose trial-and-error man might discern a method for his own survival. This is why John’s work is not primarily an art of social action: it is not the what of his work — though the people, places or things depicted can be guaranteed to have personal value to John — but the particular way they fuse that is for him a work’s meaning and power.

John surrounds himself — builds or finds or acquires — with examples of the fusion of workable substance and applicable force. These range from palm-sized stones, to a 15-foot branch used as a railing in the stairway of his house, to the ladder he built of stacked pyramids for his studio. John makes feathery paper and stick sculptures that move in the slightest breeze; installs multipaneled and folded pieces in corners so that they change with the viewer’s approach; uses the finite number of corner-to-corner folds of a piece of paper in combination with drawing to make geometry a mobile experience.

He greatly admires Buckminster Fuller. He loves to watch dance.
The components of rhythm are movement and order. In John’s case, his love of movement is a matter of personality. Order he has studied for 40 years as it applies to each of those media in which he works. He has experimented with the size, shape, and heft of pages as they turn in a book; with tone, perspective, and frame as photographic principles; with transparency, stroke and texture as ingredients of watercolor. So I modify what I said at first. To call John “an artist accomplished in a dozen media” is not wrong, but it unduly fragments his guiding passion. In a sense, John has only one subject, one technique, one piece of equipment, one medium. The subject is fluidity; the technique, integration; the equipment, hands; the medium, sight.

II. Landscape in art supposes a crucial distinction between Man and Nature – that Man is conscious, that Nature is not. Man and Nature have parallel, but separate existences. …nature’s awesome power is mitigated by our ability to think and feel. The separateness permits the artist to locate upon the unknowing planet metaphoric identifications with ourselves. Artists in all media, photography included, invent metaphors for consciousness, and use the metaphors to describe, explain or moralize our acts… Much of John Wood’s photographic works are landscapes. Like all landscapes, John’s incorporate his own and societies’ values. In past work, such as the extended “gun in the landscape” series, John juxtaposed mass-produced weaponry against rocks and beasts, ancient pictographs, the remains of native American dwellings and finely crafted objects such as water vessels and weathervanes. John used the dichotomy between culture and nature to express his concerns as a husbander of nature and America’s ambivalence toward the preservation of nature.…

In the past, John’s landscapes appealed gently for ecological sanity. His recent landscapes are darker, and more urgent. …Kinship of shape, tone and subject also coheres John’s larger grouping of images. The threat of nuclear disaster to the survival of life on earth suffuses a reading of nine photographs John sequenced in 1985. Each of the images is shrouded in dark tones; several reverse positive and negative tones; and several are seen from such abrupt or unusual angles that a first and lasting impression is one of disturbance to the natural order of things. The sequence is an anguished vision, but not a hopeless one.

The first picture, of the lower half of an eagle with an identifying label strung on its talons and dangling on its belly, is a vertical image. The last picture, of a tiny baby scrunched in a car seat, is also vertical. The visual equation of symbols – the first, national: representing great and unfettered freedom (alas, the bird is dead) and the second, personal and universal: representing regeneration (the baby is John’s grandchild) – acts simultaneously to heighten a sense of loss and to engage a sense of protection. In these key positions, nature’s fate is matched to our own.

The seven internal images are all horizontals, and with the exception of the mid-point of the sequence, all are landscapes. The first of these is positive/negative reversed, so that open sky above a field of grasses looms darkly above oddly shadowed, broken stalks. The second landscape, again in reversed tonalities, is a rephotographed collage. A postcard of a Golden Eagle, in proud profile, has been placed on a tangle of star shaped leaves. While the third landscape is in correct tonality, it echoes its precursors in subject and shape. Two trees, tightly grown together, are photographed so that they appear to be falling. This angle emphasizes their roots, which seem like talons clutching loosened earth unable to hold them.

The sense of disorder in the second set of landscapes is even more disturbing than in the first. Now , it is not an overcast field, a nearly extinct bird, one rotted woods, but widespread and profound destruction. The first of these images is another view of the star-shaped leaves. The bird is gone; above the leaves, between them, dusting their surfaces, the air is choked with charcoal smog. Then, the woods again. From dead center of the image, to the edges and past the edges, are concentric rings of energy so violent they literally shake the earth: trees fall helter-skelter bouncing like matchsticks. In the last landscape, a river rushes forward, carrying torn branches over a waterfall that seems to spill into the viewer’s space.

In all of these landscape images, the formal devices are used to conjoin our destiny to nature’s. John has attempted to go beyond identification with nature, even beyond empathy with it. He has tried to subdue his consciousness by moving his eyes and hands in ways that resemble the gestures of things moved by natural and man-made energies. But we are conscious and nature is not. The Pathetic Fallacy does not work in reverse. John, the picturemaker, knows this very well.

The fifth image of the sequence is its core and key. In it, an American flag unfurls across a house. A cast eagle, wings spread, rides atop the flagpole. The stars of the flag look like the leaves; the house leans precariously, like the trees. American flag, family home, bronze eagle – all are inventions of the imagination. They are symbols of the human needs to bond, to believe in things, to shape a world. In this sequence, the symbols and what they stand for, are endangered.

It  takes an act of courage to present sophisticated formal expression as a means of “quiet protest” (John’s words) in this postmodern age, an age in which pictures are litter and image inundation has numbed us equally to violence and to the magic of simple things. John combines simple things – the matching of shapes, the continuity of gestures – to cohere a complex world. For John, the interconnectedness of subject and form, of the natural and made, stands for the possibility of a peaceful coexistence between ourselves and nature.”

[Cohen, Susan E. “The Art of John Wood.” pp. 30-37 in: 4 x 4 Four Photographers by Four Writers: Eileen Cowin by Mark Johnstone, Nathan Lyons by Leroy Searle, Mary Ellen Mark by Shelly Rice and John Wood by Susan E. Cohen. Boulder, Colo.: University of Colorado, Boulder, Dept. of Fine Arts, c1987. 39 p. 9 b & w. 1 color (on front cover) by Wood.]

In the 1980s John experienced two major lifestyle changes. He separated from his first wife to live with the artist Laurie Snyder and in 1989 he retired from full-time teaching at Alfred University, although he continued to teach workshops throughout the decade. Laurie Snyder had attended Swarthmore College in the mid sixties, then married and had two children. In the 1980s she went back to school, describing herself as “An over-thirty undergraduate at Cornell, formerly a potter, …looking for a better way of expressing myself…” I found it in photography. I attended a lecture by John Wood at Cornell in 1982, and was impressed with the work and the man.” More than a year later she took a week-long summer workshop with John where they met and fell in love. Laurie submitted a “Monograph on the Work of John Wood – Artist and Teacher” in 1987 in partial fulfillment of her MFA degree requirements at Syracuse University. This is an extensively researched document with a detailed look at Wood’s biography and body of work. Laurie lived and taught in Ithaca, New York and John moved there in 1987, joining Laurie and her teenaged sons Noah and Benjamin, living in a converted farmhouse in a picturesquely rural setting surrounded by the extensive fields and woods of the Cornell Agricultural Experimental Station crop testing sites. When Laurie was hired to teach at the Maryland Institute College of Art in 1993 they began to divide their time between Baltimore during the academic year and Ithaca during their summers, with frequent trips to give lectures and teach seminars and offer workshops at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Colorado, at the International Center for Photography in New York City, the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, NY and elsewhere through the 1990s. They married in 1996.

Each is an artist with their own interests and ideas, and each has developed a uniquely personal style to best express those interests – but they both also share many similar concerns and interests in the same mediums and materials. Both work freely across photography, drawing, printmaking and collage as favored forms; and both are strongly committed to the artist’s book as a means of expressing their ideas.

In a 1992 interview both artists responded to the question of mutual influences:

Susie Cohen: I would like to ask each of you what it is like to move into a situation where you have a partnership with a person who is equally creative. I know that you are both strong advocates of each other’s work, and I’d be interested to know how the partnership affects your work and also what kinds of seepages there are from ideas between you and among you and the way your work looks? What does it feel like to be living with a person who you consider a peer and a creative partner as well as a life partner? Is that fair?
John Wood: Sure, it’s a good question.   Laurie…? (laughter)
Laurie Snyder: I was curious as to what you would say first.
JW: Well, first of all I think it’s very desirable –so far anyway. We’re very compatible. I’m talking about not just in our general living, but in terms of working. I’m very happy to share with Laurie some of the skills that I’ve developed through the years –particularly in binding and stuff like that. And we share images back and forth. I think her sense of work is quite lively and I think that influences me. Well, simple things, like we do share images. Some of my images are in Laurie’s work and some of Laurie’s images are in my work and that hasn’t created any problems for me. I don’t know if it has for her.
LS: I’d say that of those pictures that we share, we also have some that we clearly think of as separate pictures. If there were, say, a thousand negatives then there are probably about twenty percent on either end that are yours or mine. Then there are some in the middle that are general domain. I sometimes think of them as if we were sharing a box of crayons.
JW: Well, for example, we both do use the cyanotype as a gestural medium. You can put the cyanotype chemicals down on the paper as a gesture. [In brushstrokes rather than as an even coating.] We both do that. So there is going to be a certain similarity to the work.  And, yes, there are specific negatives that usually appear in a piece that really works for one of us and we each generally claim those negatives as our own.
LS: It seems to have one’s signature on it, in a way.
JW: Yes.
LS: But then there are others. We have a sort of generic pine tree that it seems like we both use. It’s just this pine tree smack dab in the middle of this big negative… And we have several of the mountain pictures where we don’t even know who took the slide. We used the same camera at the same site and we each took ten or twelve slides. I made enlarged negatives from those slides and either one of use can use those negatives in any way we damn well choose. But there are certainly other negatives that one or the other of us has taken that’s to be in the box [negative drawer] that says “Laurie” or says “John.” And then there are some negatives that just float around… And we ask each other’s permission, too.
JW: For instance, Laurie’s working on some family things. I wouldn’t dream of taking one of those images. If there are any negatives that are just generic images, then I’d feel free to use them. But I wouldn’t dream of using images of any of the immediate things that she is dealing with.
LS: We started using each other’s negatives during our residency at the Anderson Ranch in Colorado. It’s so easy to take pictures there that you could have gone to the drug store and bought on a post card. It’s the goddam mountains just sitting there and the picture looks the same whether you take the picture or I take the picture. The first pictures you make look just like other people’s pictures. You think, ‘God, this is hopeless. It’s sort of comical when you realize it. On that trip we took one 35mm camera, one 2 ¼ camera and one 4 x 5 camera between us and we used them interchangeably. And the negatives sort of became part of our private public domain.
JW: And I’ve been in this type of situation for a long time, because I made negatives of pictures taken by other people in the newspapers and magazines during the Vietnam War to use to create some of my early collages; where I added color or the textures of the collaged materials to create my own statement. I made them until eventually I became embarrassed, because the collages were always reproduced in black and white, which took away all the hand things I did to create the new image and those things were not there anymore and the borrowed images in the piece would pop out at me and I just felt that it was wrong. So I stopped then….

[Cohen, Susie and William Johnson. Audiotape interview with Laurie Sievert Snyder and John Wood in John’s studio at Ithaca, NY on July 25, 1992.]

During the summer of 1992 the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, NY. held an exhibition of John’s work which specifically featuring his concerns on ecological issues and nuclear dangers. Quiet Protest: Recent Work by John Wood displayed thirty‑three works by the artist which ranged across several media. The exhibition contained an installation piece in a small alcove, which consisted of nine willow twig tripods or teepee structures, each with a square of hand‑made paper containing a single printed word, hanging by a long thread from the tripod’s apex. A limited-edition artist’s book titled With What Will We Build Our Nuclear Waste Box? was also placed in the small room. In the main gallery were thirty-two large prints and a second limited‑edition artist’s book, titled Oil and Water, made with acrylic, paste paper, graphite, watercolor and computer text. Both books were open and available for reading by anyone attending the exhibition. There were several diptych prints and one piece, titled “Bird Names,” consisting of seven silver prints and a printed statement, among these thirty‑two prints. The prints ranged from straight silver print photographs to cyanotypes, and monoprints. Most of these works were collages, made with silver prints, applied watercolor or applied acrylic, graphite, etc. Several of the prints were identified as being from specific series, including the Fall Creek Rock Drawings, the Colorado Series, and the Exxon Valdez Series.

Two printed statements were displayed with the works in the exhibition.

“On March 24th, 1989 the Exxon Valdez ran aground spilling 10 million gallons of oil in Prince William Sound, Alaska. On March 24th I made a list of all the waterbirds with the name of a color in their name.
Lawrence Rawls is chairman of Exxon
George Nelson is director of Alyeska, pipeline company (7 firms)
Joseph Hazelwood is the captain of the tanker
Third mate Gregory Comsuis pilots the tanker
And John Wood, the artist, drives his car.

In my pictures
I try to see around
the corners of
landscape
feel objects
and touch the
enormity of what we do

I wonder if small acts
can bear on our problems
that is my hope
John Wood 1992”


In July 1992 Susie and I visited and interviewed John and Laurie at his studio in Ithaca, NY, and I published parts of that interview in the September 1992 issue of The Consort, which featured the exhibition.

“Susan Cohen:Why did oil become the symbolic element of waste in your photographs exhibited in “Quiet Protest”?
John Wood: Well, because of the Exxon Valdez event and the fact that we all personally use oil, and that it’s a full circle; which we have to think about in one way or another. And I try to find ways that add that sort of idea in my imagery.
SC: There are so many things that we waste that I was interested in why you chose that one. The picture “Laurie’s Cobble,” with 1/4 teaspoon of oil. It’s astonishing how far that oil goes…
JW: Well, when the Exxon Valdez spill happened it was ten million gallons <197> or whatever it was. That was a specific number, and it was a dramatic act. And it was the responsibility of the corporations, but it was also our own responsibility.
Laurie Snyder:Every time you get the oil changed in your car you’re asking them to throw away four to six quarts of oil. Where does that oil go, when you go to the gas station?
JW: Anyway that’s why I dealt with that topic and I think all of the things I’ve dealt with in a similar fashion are just such a complex thing. But it all comes around and envelopes us and I wanted those things to be in my imagery. In the early series on guns in the landscape, for instance, there’s nothing about that series that literally says I’m against guns. Yet I am, and I feel that those images say that, they say it very specifically, I mean, they don’t say it specifically but they say it abstractly, or metaphorically. And the toxic waste pieces, the works about nuclear waste, it’s the same thing. I list a number of words like “granite,” “glass,” “paper,” “air,” “water,” and I say how are we going to contain our nuclear waste? And there’s nothing that really protests, there’s nothing lethal about what I’m saying, nothing that’s going to solve the problem. It’s just the way I can get at stuff, I guess.
William Johnson: Your imagery refers to nuclear waste issues and to oil spills and issues of pollution and conservation, but you don’t make strident, overtly political propaganda. You have quietly produced images dealing with these concerns, about issues of conservation and pollution and atomic energy and atomic waste for many years now, so was there a specific reason to focus that on those things in this show? Or is this just a continuation of a long‑term effort?
JW: Well, the show itself is a continuation of my work, there is nothing about the show that is very different from anything else I could pull out of my files…
WJ: It’s what you’ve been doing since at least the 1960s.
JW: Yes. The reason it gets kind of concentrated in the show is that I am still doing it, I guess.
LS: Also, you and Jim Wyman (Curator of the Visual Studies Workshop Gallery, and of this exhibition.) discussed whether you could design a show that would be around a central concept to help solidify it.
JW: I think Jim wanted it to be even more specific, but I didn’t. “Quiet Protest” was my name for it simply because he wanted a name, I look at it as an exhibit of my work.
WJ: Can we describe the show a little bit? What do you call these wonderful tripod pieces? Would that be a sitework?
LS: Wonderful tripod pieces, there you go, it’s his tripod installation. It was his attempt to be a trendy artist. (Laughter.)
JW: Yeah. Years ago I did a series of sculptural things where I figured out how I could support a piece of paper in space. I ended up with about fifteen pieces, one of which is this tripod of three willow sticks with the thin paper supported just off the floor with nine threads which are hanging from the tripod. So, when I was trying to think of a project that I wanted to do this was one of the things I came up with. I repeated this thing that I had discovered a long time ago. This tripod suspending a piece of thin Japanese tissue was interesting to me. It sways on the nine threads, and it just stays there. So when I had the idea of doing a simple installation of these things I figured out how I wanted to do it and I went out and cut the willow sticks and trimmed them and peeled them and I did the string and I made the paper and I printed one word on each sheet of paper and I suspended them from these tripods.
WJ: And the words are “Granite.”
JW: “Salt,” “Paper…”
LS: “Steel.”
JW: “Steel,” “Glass,” “Lead,” “Clay,” “Wood” and “Water.”
WJ: These nine tripods are presented in a small alcove in the exhibition. One of the things that I remembered when I looked at that was that there were some air currents or something. The pieces were swaying with a very subtle elegant movement, sort of floating under these very tenuous‑looking stick tripods.
JW: A gust of wind would have demolished the whole setup.
LS: A kid on a tricycle.
WJ: Then there’s an artist’s book there in the space, which you can pick up and read, and it has the same words printed one per page, on graph paper. And this particular work was titled “With What Will We Build Our Nuclear Waste Box?”
LS: It’s quintessentially ephemeral, lightweight, and fragile and yet it’s dealing with things that are supposed to make you feel secure like granite, steel, and heavy solid things which aren’t going to move.
WJ: What else is in the exhibition?
JW: There are two books and there are a lot of my images, collages…
WJ: How big?
JW: They’re mostly in the 22″x30″ range.
WJ: And these are collages with photographs?
JW: Collages with silver print photographs, also cyanotypes and other materials, and hand applied colors, graphite, etc.
WJ: There are words in some of those.as well?
JW: There are texts in some of them. A typical piece is the collage consisting of several photographs of corn cribs so that they have a slight shift of perspective. And there’s a big smear of liquid graphite. The title of that is “How to Hide Nuclear Waste.” And this is an ironic statement, this is where it becomes very difficult for me, because I mean this as a protest. There’s too much secrecy about the nuclear waste. There’s not enough said about it, but what is said is not true or it’s distorted or all the rest of it. So this statement, “How to Hide Nuclear Waste” is about that.
LS: You had another piece that played on the same issue, a collage which included two photographs of paper bags held closed with a clothespin at the top. It was concerned with how to store dangerous materials. In your talks with students and other people you’ve said that you felt that, in a sense, every human being should have some nuclear waste that they had to store and keep safe. It would spread this idea around that we have huge storage places that would clearly wipe out whole pockets of populations that live around those places, but if every person had a small amount that they had to…
SC: They’d be more serious about keeping it. It becomes closer to each of us.
JW: Every one of my images, whether conscious or not, has a number of different levels, for example in the picture of the corn cribs which is about how to hide nuclear waste. Well, we’re also hiding it in our food chain. And the paper bag thing was reflecting on the fact that we’re dealing with things that have such an extremely long life and we’re not really thinking about it carefully. I mean, a stainless steel canister, in terms of the life of nuclear waste, is almost as fragile as the paper bag. And its that kind of multiplicity that I’m seeking in the pieces.
SC: But there is actually nothing that we know of that can contain those wastes.
LS: We have no way of testing anything for the period of time that is required…
JW: And we’re being misled about it.
WJ: But it also seems to me that instead of pointing the finger at the government or something like that, you’re saying it’s the responsibility of each individual human being to be concerned.
JW: Well, that’s the circular thing that I feel, it all comes back to each one of us.
WJ: I don’t think about nuclear waste each day, I put it out of my mind everyday, although, as you say, it is probably one of the more important issues of our time.
LS: But if you had a coffee can that was your responsibility to keep safe from Josh and Susan and you knew that your neighbor had one too, you’d make sure that you both knew where it was at all times.
SC: I’d worry about my neighbor a lot more than I do now, that’s for sure.
LS: Yeah.
SC: But it might create a closer chain among humans…
LS: But, in a sense, what we’re talking about is that nuclear waste is our neighbor and yet we put it out of our minds. And I think that’s what John is trying to grapple with, without chaining himself to a fence at the proposed depot site.
JW: Well, I feel that this is my subject matter in a way that I can’t ignore. I still love to take nice photographs, I like landscapes and I like nice silver prints and stuff like that, but I feel a little uncomfortable with that right now. I feel that if I’m going to display stuff, that it has to go beyond that…
LS: Some of the reasons you work with the nuclear waste issue in particular is that some of your family and colleagues in Alfred are sitting on the proposed site. In fact, your former property is not more than ten miles from the proposed site of New York State’s largest storage facility.
JW: Yes, that comes very close personally. My grandchildren live less than five miles from this proposed site. But also a lot of my friends were willing to be arrested.
LS: They put their lives on the line.
JW: Yes, Bill Perry, was actually arrested.
LS: Yes, he spent the night in the jail.
JW: Blocking these inspectors who were going to survey the site and do stuff to it. Not only in Allegheny County but Cortland County, which is right next door. These people are really battling. And it wasn’t a battle of “not in my backyard,” because I don’t know what the answer to that is. They were battling more that the government has to think more about this. I mean, it has to be solved in a better way than secretly burying it somewhere. I don’t know which official said this statement, but he said, “Trust us, we know what we’re doing.” They don’t know what they’re doing. And there’s no reason at all in the world to trust them, in relationship to things that have happened in the past about nuclear waste and what happens with it.
WJ: But, again, while this has become a fairly pointed and specific issue to you recently, issues of the bomb and gun control have been a long‑standing concern in your work for many years now.
JW: Ever since I’ve been a conscious artist — you know, somebody that’s dealing with ideas — these have been my concerns. And I think that’s one of the reasons why photography was interesting to me. Particularly collaging, that permitted me to feed this kind of stuff into my images. It doesn’t occur in my drawings, for instance. I don’t make drawings of protests or I don’t make drawing of George Bush and make it pointedly propagandistic…
WJ: But you also don’t make photographs of that either. You make photographs of natural things around you in your life. The picture called “Laurie’s cobble” is a photograph of a very smooth oval rock with a drop of oil spread on it.
JW: It was a pink cobblestone that Laurie brought me from Nova Scotia and originally I made a photograph of it and that was the title of the photograph. There’s a little text that said Laurie went down to the beach at six o’clock in the morning and brought me back this cobblestone from Nova Scotia so I had this cobble and I had this photograph that I’d made of it that had nothing to do with nuclear waste or oil spills or anything else. And I felt the need to bring this into the context of the oil spill and I put some oil on it and rephotographed it.
LS: Well, if we had a big oil spill in our yard, you know it would effect us very closely. We don’t live in Alaska and we don’t live on the coast, but if you take something that’s important to you personally and it gets polluted, that infects you. John took an object of love and intimacy and by putting a teaspoon of oil on that particular rock, that act made it more hard‑hitting. It practically made me cry. But then, in the end, the actual rock that the oil spill is on is just gorgeous.
(laughter)
SC: Unfortunately, yes.
JW: That’s one of the things that I run up against because I don’t want to make images that are ugly. I mean, I’m dealing with an ugly subject, I suppose, but I want my images to be beautiful. But this has a long history, I mean Picasso’s “Guernica” is a beautiful painting and Goya’s etchings are exquisite to me, so I guess that’s what the artist does if he’s going to deal with this. Heartfield’s images weren’t so beautiful, I mean he was much more specific…
SC: Oh, but they do have a whole unity about them, it’s that same wonderful thing about the way something hangs together, it means what it means by how it looks.
JW: I guess if an artist is really going to be cutting, he goes and does street theater or protest in some way other than his work.
LS: But that certainly is not your way.
JW: That is not my way.
SC: Laurie, do you deal with the big issues in your work? John directly addresses the big issues although he does it with a bird or a pebble <197> it’s contextualized. What are the issues of your work? It’s interesting to me because earlier we talked about how you both often use the same negative of a pine tree in a picture. I mean, I guess I’m getting to the old basic thing, the picture is not about what’s in the picture, the picture is about what else is going on in the picture.
LS: I do a lot of imagery that derives somewhat more out of personal experience, in that sense, it is more diaristic. I don’t particularly think of it as particularly about me, but a lot of the imagery comes out of really ordinary kind of everyday kind of stuff <197> a tomato that I’m peeling, or making bread, or things like that, but I don’t think of it particularly about peeling tomatoes.
SC: But what’s the transforming process that makes the personal act into something that could touch everybody.
LS: But often, as you’re peeling a tomato and you think, “God, the skin as it hangs off the fork looks like Michelangelo’s flayed skin on the Sistine Chapel that I studied in art history about 25 years ago…” And so I’m sitting here peeling tomatoes on a hot summer afternoon and I think, “Oh shit, I better photograph this thing.” I mean that’s very common for me. A lot of times I can’t make the photograph then, there are seventeen people coming for supper or something, so I write it down at night and some other time I take the photograph.
SC: But somehow the recognition of the small event as representing something larger, or something within the continuous history of art making, that doesn’t disappear, it shows up.
LS: Yes, I think so.
JW: And the photograph can do that, that’s what it can really do, I mean it’s the melding together that comes out of your own experience.
LS: And I’ve always liked that in other people’s work, that sort of attention to the little details that seem as important as the big issues.
JW: I think that could be said about my work and Laurie’s work. I mean her issues are just as important and broad as my issues.
LS: I don’t take on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
JW: But I don’t either.
SC: But the value of life, I didn’t mean to say that your work is less because it dealt with private issues, I guess I was trying to work around what that whole concept is.
LS: I have a photograph where I use strudel dough, the image is of some very thin dough through which you can see the contours of the hand, an old hand. The picture really is about skin and fragility and feelings and feelings of being punctured. I guess I use my mother fairly often in my pictures. It’s handy, she’s around all the time…
SC: She’s got these good old hands?
LS: She’s got old hands, they’re extremely capable woman’s hands that are now very old, a little less capable, but certainly heavily used tools.
JW: But you see, to me, that would be an issue that’s just as broad as a ten million gallon oil spill and I guess I would hope that some of my images would have some of that also….
[Conversation continues]…”

[Cohen, Susie E. and William Johnson. “Quiet Protest: Conversation with the Artist.” The Consort: A Calendar of Photography, Film and Video Events in and around Rochester with Reviews, Interviews and Critical Essays (Sept. 1992): 1-14. 9 b & w. (Office of University Educational Services, George Eastman House).]

John has worked across a wide range of visual media during his career, making work ranging from large painted canvases to small wooden constructions. But one strong constant in John’s art-making practice since the 1950s has been his interest in the artist’s book. He has taught artist’s book making classes and workshops to hundreds of students and he has made more than fifty artist’s books. Most of these were in extremely limited editions – either unique copies, or in editions of from three to a hundred copies. In 1996 he had the opportunity to create an artist’s book at the Visual Studies Workshop Press in an edition of 3000 copies. This book OZONE ALERT, againextends John’s ecological concerns.

The texts are short:

“the other day I read on a highway sign WARNING OZONE ALERT.” 

Miners Take a yellow canary into the
Mine to warn them of danger. The
bird’s collapse alerts the miners to bad air.

I wonder if our songbirds will warn
us of bad air and will we be able to
understand their song?

In July 1995 I took photographs of
The cooling towers at three mile island
And made a list of 89 birds with color in their name.”

This is followed by twenty-seven pages of landscape photographs, varying from distant views of the nuclear cooling towers to close-up scenes of flowers, rocks or rubble found in both urban and rural sites. Each of these scenes has a single line of text, consisting of the 89 bird’s names, printed across the middle of each page:

“blue-footed booby yellow crowned heron white ibis great blue heron yellow warbler,” etc.

The mixture of the beautiful and the mundane, the poetry of the birds’ names against the grimness of the industrial views, sets up a dynamic of attraction and repulsion, and leads to a sense of unease and disquiet that plays out through the patterns and modulations of the pages of the book. A form of communication, which John has pointed out, that you hold in your hands and view at a personal distance and read at a personal rate of speed – in other words, a private, privileged and intimate form of communication. And John sets up a dynamic in his book that is not intellectual, not a reasoned argument for or against nuclear energy – rather his tropes and figures call up an intuitive sense of possible danger and potential loss, a foreboding rather than a prediction, a call for caring concern rather than an argument for specific action.

[Wood, John. OZONE ALERT Rochester, NY: Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1996. 32 pp. ]

[FINAL STATEMENT]
When I interviewed John in 2006, he first warned me with that always almost painful honesty that he had always shown me that he was “slower now” – by which he meant that he couldn’t remember some of the past events in great detail any more and that he also had some trouble finding the correct words he was seeking when he attempted to talk about issues. But the amazing diversity and beauty of his art practice over the past twenty years hasn’t seemed to have been in any way slowed down. So our interviews became sessions where I simply enjoyed the wonderful art that he showed me, piece after piece; while I tried to frame very direct, very basic questions. Looking at some lovely computer prints which had lists of single words incorporated into the images, I asked if he had ever enjoyed Concrete Poetry, to which he responded he had been very interested in it back in the 1960s. Something in the color and line of one work impelled me to ask if he had ever been influenced by Paul Klee. He answered, without an ounce of sarcasm or irony, “Wasn’t everyone?” Then finally I asked the most basic and hardest question of all. “Why do you make art?” John looked surprised, even bewildered by the question; then answered “How could I not?”

Horses, Sea Lions, and Other Creatures: Robert Frank, Dave Heath, Robert Heinecken and John Wood, by Susan E. Cohen and William S. Johnson. Belmont, MA: Joshua Press, 1986. 242 pp., 36 35mm slides bound‑in. Limited edition, 16 copies, printed on an IBM‑AT computer, with WordStar 2000 software.

“Quiet Protest: Recent Work by John Wood. Conversation with the Artist,” by Susan E. Cohen and William Johnson. The Consort (Sept. 1992): 1‑14.

John Wood. On the Edge of Clear Meaning.
Text by David Levi Strauss, William S. Johnson and Ezra Shales. Book design by Joan Lyons. Gottingen: Steidl, 2008. 178 pp. 168 illus. [Accompanied an exhibition first co-hosted at the George Eastman House, the Visual Studies Workshop and the Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, NY, then traveled to the International Center of Photography and the Grey Art Gallery, New York, NY, then elsewhere.]



JOHN WOOD. (POLAROID PROJECT IV)

POLAROID PROJECT IV. JOHN WOOD.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

The following is an excerpt from an essay on John Wood, written by Susie Cohen as part of the collaborative “Polaroid Project” that John participated in with Robert Frank, Dave Heath, Robert Heinecken, and Susie and me in the early 1980s. (Search this site for “Polaroid Project” for more information about this project.)

THE KNUTE ROCKNE OASIS NEWSLETTER & JOURNAL OF CRITICAL OPINION

Vol 1: no. 1 (Sept. 1983)

Editorial Statement

Hi. Susie and I decided to go ahead with the idea that we half-humorously advanced before: to write and xerox a “newsletter” to the folks who are participating in “The Project”. The Knute Rockne Oasis Newsletter will be uncertain in format and irregular in publication. Its purpose is mostly to spread information around to everyone and to keep everyone reminded that the Project advances.

The first piece of information is that the Knute Rockne Oasis is a comfort stop along the Indiana Turnpike and it shows up on the horizon when you need some comfort.

The major item in this issue is Susie’s “letter” to Eelco Wolf. This “letter” is a fictional device that we have adopted to allow us to collect our thoughts during various phases of this event. It might be placed somewhere between a diary entry and a very rough draft of preliminary research. This device allows us a private, even personal “voice” which is frowned on in more scholarly circles. (It will probably become quickly apparent that Susie’s “private voice” is much more elegant than mine).

Let me close this inaugural “editorial statement” with a plea common to editors down through generations… If anyone wants to participate in the Knute Rockne Oasis Newsletter, please jump in.

William Johnson

NEWS & COMMENT

Robert Heinecken and Joyce Neimanas’ new address is: 407 E. Florence Blvd. Englewood, CA. 90301. (213)-672-1561. They apparently survived the move from Chicago.

Susie and my new address is: 123 White St., Belmont, Mass. 02178, (617)-484-3784. We apparently survived the move from Connecticut.

Dave Heath will be spending the week of Sept. 26-30 teaching at the Rhode Island School of Design. He will be showing his latest slide-tape performance to the public, on the 27th. There is a concurrent 40 print exhibition of his most recent work (made since everyone got together in Rochester last April).

Susie and I are gathering copy slides of John Wood’s work to send or show to everyone, which we will do soon. We fell in love with the new Polaroid instant 35mm slides which demonstrate once again that photography is alchemy and thus close to magic. John was also intrigued and has started “experimenting” with them. If anyone else would like to try some out let me know.

August 23, 1983. Dear Eelco,

Bill and I visited John Wood for the first time last week. We spent two days at his home in Alfred, New York as the guests of John and his very charming and hospitable wife, Suzanne. For over twenty years the Woods have lived in an old farmhouse that overlooks the town of Alfred through overgrown and cultivated fields. There is some relatively recent college architecture visible on the slope back into town, and a few neighbors further on up the road; the fields and woods have the atmosphere of quiet that places unmastered by neon possess. Mrs. Wood returned to school when her children were grown, and is now a librarian for the Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred. They are by no means isolated: though physically situated away from the center of town and its cluster of universities, driving (or; in John’s case, biking) into town seems a daily activity. What one senses at their house is not seclusion, but self-sufficiency that they have evolved as a couple. While the house bears evidence of family activity and outgoing hospitality: lawn and gardens, dining areas, childrens’ books, there is also evidence that they live actively for their own interests; Suzanne’s loom, her weavings, and balls of yarn in hand made pots and baskets; the study with books and papers; the potting room; tiny paper animal cut-outs that have found themselves on window sills.

In its attention to detail and its overall eclectic evolution, the house reveals elements of chance, practical elegance, craftsmanship and wide-ranging inquiry that are also elements of John’s art and character. The house is not a “work” however, as these elements are found there as separate solutions or as the unplanned evolutions that emerge from living in one place for a long time. Bill spotted the element of chance in the volunteer strawberry plants growing in cracks of the cement stairs that lead to the front porch. On the porch itself, a post has been hung to support the roof, but the post is 3″ short of its goal, supported in turn by an oval rock. John explained that this is a technique used by Japanese builders to prevent a post from rotting. I don’t really think we noticed it until John, experimenting with the instant slide film we’d brought, made two pictures of it. The slides (we looked at them right after breakfast because it had been too dark the evening we arrived to use the film) showed the upright (half in light, half in shadow, edge highlighted) contrasting the continuously shaded round rock. Simple, lovely. Inside, in the staircase leading from the ground floor to the upstairs bedrooms, the banister is a long, tapered branch, glowing from the handholds of countless passers. The bathroom towel rack is also a branch, rounded and polished in use.

I would not pretend to know them well after so brief a visit, but would suggest that the Woods’ graciousness is a habit not so much of special treatment for guests, but of absorbing the visitors within their full lives. We were obviously an interruption of some routines, yet we felt that there was “room” for our presence and our ideas.

For many years John had used various spaces within the large house as studio space, but several years ago he and his daughter constructed a building in the field just across the road from the house. Though the field is harvested casually by a neighbor for hay, the studio building itself sits in a wild growth of tall grass and flowers visited by birds and butterflies, Chicory, hawkweed, butter-and-eggs and Queen Anne’s Lace grow along the path from the road to the studio. It was idyllic when we were there, but John warned us that Alfred is dismal in the winter, which hangs on in low gray wet skies until April.

John’s studio: one large ground floor room, an el shape, with a small darkroom; storage loft above. Well-lighted with windows and a sky-light. Most of the furniture is old cabinets and work tables, a desk with telephone in one corner. A woodstove, drafting table, one hard-wood chair, a stool, a director’s chair. The stairs to the loft are narrow pyramids set on end to a slanting board.

Books: Miro, Sears catalogue, geometry, stencil patterns, Theodore Roethke; on printmaking and bookbinding. On the walls and window sills: paper stencils, hand made paper birds, shells, stones, pottery, folded paper. On the tables: papers, string, jars of ink. crayons, pencils, color swatches, rulers, fixative, clothespins, magazines, cans. On a beam; jars of tint for making crayons. On one table: a low flat heat box that John uses to make wax color drawings (he built it fearing to use the wood stove for this purpose).

John claims to be an disorganized person, and it is true that the studio is a clutter of tables, piles, paper, bottles, brushes, finished work and work in progress. Yet the ongoing work – in this case, collages on Japanese paper photographically printed in cyan – was spacially and visually distinct. As John began to bring out older work for us to see, he did so from drawers and solander boxes that though heaped with more current materials, were carefully closed and protected. John wraps and handles the work with precise movements made of equal parts of physical and emotional respect for it. I noticed particularly that John’s body arcs around an “area of interest” (whether its the work or a newspaper or an implement) and thus he defines a special and intense enclosure for himself and the onlooker.

In earlier interviews, and to us, John stated that while working, he is often “distracted” from one direction to another by the glimpse of an object or the glimmer of an idea. And we could see that the jars, colors, textures, and shapes of things were casually situated to be suggestive to an open mind. Though our acquaintance is brief, I would like to stress this: that the “disorganization” is a provocation of possibilities, an endless store of manipulable source material. The clutter is a screen in the negative sense only to the extent that it may bother John personally. I suspect, however, that John is himself a screen, and that he instinctively adjusts the mesh to allow through, to see, what it is he needs to work. John is not directionless but multi-directioned. His purpose is less to make than to feel the making, less to finish that to experience. His works, both ongoing and finished, are visually and psychologically forceful expressions for finely distincted feelings and for a variety of forms for them.

John is expert at photography, printmaking, papermaking, painting, drawing, and bookbinding, and these in pure states and in combinations. He often creates or recreates the tools and processes he uses. The most apt term for him would be image-maker. (He feels that “photography” is the silver print, that what he does is closer to “printmaking” in traditional terms. He is worried, and curious, at the categories in which his work has been placed and discussed). At this point in our acquaintance, I would concur with John’s assessment that his training at the Institute of Design is responsible for his openness to and facility with materials, processes and ideas. This training is at least what gave discipline to the creative intentions that were intriguing him and then lured him to the Institute in 1950.

I’m not sufficiently aware of the chronology or diversity of John’s work to describe it well. From what I saw, however, which included ingeniously bound books, black and white and color pencil drawings, paintings, sculpture of sticks and paper, straight silver photographs, collages of photographs and drawings, collages of photographs, collages with words, stencils, etc, I have a preliminary sense of what makes John’s work his.

First, as I mentioned, there is an air of respect about finished works that is not only an attitude of John’s, but emanates as well from the work. Each series, or piece (regardless of its sketch-like quality or polish) is made with an assured hand, the hand of an experienced and careful craftsman. Even the most “experimental” or protean work proceeds from a clarity that demonstrates purpose -even if the ultimate “meaning” is not yet known.

Secondly, there is the fact of the diversity itself. Any material, and surface is a potential “light modulator” (in Moholy’s words). And I think that John’s encompassing attitude toward the potential significance of any scrap of material or ray of light parallels his attitude toward feelings: that there is none too insignificant among human states not worthy of exploration and visual form. It seems that John can evoke “tenderness” as well from three sticks joined in an open pyramid as from moonlight; “terror” from the outline of a gun as well as from the depiction of natural forces; and the exuberance of human motion from the abstract markings of his hand as well as from the literal depiction of the moving figure. Unlike Moholy’s fierce idealism, which projected the camera as the transmitter of modern experience, John’s work is filled with a gentler, but also an uncompromising social purpose. He does not believe that his art, or any art, can change the world directly, especially through specific, cause-related imagery. Yet he has faith that his art, and all art, in the long run, elicits a non-violent, positive response from the sensitive viewer. Though some of his images depict recognizable events or situations (such as the Vietnam war) his art his non-narrative, non-propagandistic. He calls them “quiet protests.” Others of his pieces refer to environmental and other current political concerns such as the preservation of whales and nuclear disarmament. Where Heinecken’s commentary is biting, John’s is fantastical, due to the use of animal shapes and the surrealism of the collage technique. Yet they are penetrating and memorable because of the purity of form and the richness of form combinations. Some of the work, such as the pencil “systems drawings”, some watercolors and paintings, and handmade paper shapes, are pure abstractions. Like the abstract works of Hartley, Marin and O’Keeffe, however, they derive ultimately from the observation of nature rather than from abstract intellect. In the “systems drawings” for instance, the thickness of marks and the layering of tone strongly evoke the careful but pleasurable movement of the hand. The patterning devices are a control, and these were stimulated from an interest in Mimbres pottery.

Another group of abstractions is a series of small watercolors, each the size of a folio account sheet cut in half from a blank “banker’s book” John found. John made a special, cloth-covered box to hold the series. The overall design of each is an open, geometric mesh, constructed with short, bright strokes. Again, the formality of the design is played against the thin/thickness of the outlining strokes and fill-in color. Though John has training as an architecture engineer and can make very precise renderings, these watercolors (and others of his drawings)’show a deliberate skew from mechanical rigidity. He made the brushes for this series from dried yucca stalks. The brushes, still tinted, sit in a clay pot on a window sill.

Although it may be hasty at this point, or even irrelevant, I want to try to categorize John’s work beyond “multi-media humanist”. I’m guessing that there is some central belief at the heart of it: faith not in a hierarchical ordering but faith that there isn’t disorder in the universe. That change observed or made is mysterious but meaningful; that perception of alteration or the proclivity to alter is the human gift.

John is averse to mechanical (photographic) order for its own sake. He has said on several occasions that making his work isn’t meaningful for him unless it incorporates the feelings he has for the people (objects, motion, color) in this work. He is equally shy of the sort of stylized belief that Minor White (whom he knew) developed around photography. Certainly the content of John’s photographs are seen “for what else they are” but John does not use, or advocate the use, of photographs for self-teaching or meditation.

John consistently uses symbolic imagery: stars, whales, guns, tree images of himself and of his friends: certain pastel hues, layered space and photographic puns are repeated formal devices; the marks of his hand with pencil, with paint and in sand are both form and content, John goes to galleries, judges contests, oversees students and is well-versed in art history- But like his house, when he works he is self-sufficient: inventing and borrowing as he needs. He neither follows trends nor cares if he leads them. His work refers occasionally to pictographs, surrealism and popular media. But all of this: symbols, references, forms are only the letters of an alphabet and I haven’t yet grasped whether they make novels or poems or prayers.

John didn’t work much during our visit. We had brought the 4×5 film he requested and stayed awake late one night to try it out and took our portraits with it before we left. The surprise was his response to the Polaroid instant slide film. We had brought it to make record slides but John was intrigued with the quickness of it and with the magic processing box. He liked the cellular quality of the color, and the platinum-like tonal range of the black & white. We left the processor and some film with him. Another “distraction”? I hope so. More soon,

SUSIE.

Two acknowledged interests of John’s were Buckminster Fuller and the concrete poetry movement, and he referenced both in many images throughout his career.

At one time John often frequented a local beach, where the waves deposited a layer of white sand over a layer of dark sand, which was erased and reconstituted with each wave, a natural process creating a tabula rasa for the “mark making” that John so loved to do.

The following images are several pages from my informal records of the “retrospective” portion of the exhibition, indicating choices and positioning of that portion of the project. John’s early conceptual sequences, created years before other, better-known artists in California, were a pioneering effort in shifting the paradigm of “creative photography” away from the single print modernist aesthetic, which was one of the criteria we considered when we asked the four artists to participate in the project.

First meeting as a group, held at Joan & Nathan Lyon’s house in Rochester, NY.

John was one of the participants who accepted the offer to use the Polaroid 20 x 24” camera in the studio at the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. On this visit John chose to experiment with the color and scale of the large camera, as the last stage in his continuously evolving process of segueing an image through a variety of media and processes to finally reach the completed image. It is entirely possible that some portion of the final collages shown on the studio walls began as the 35mm Polaroid slide film that is described in Susie’s comments on our first visit to his house in 1983.

Copy of the layout of the images that John created for his 16 page signature that each artist made for the project. The final image is a portrait of one of his grandchildren. For me this sequence was one of John’s “quiet protests,” a poetically visual and subtly unsettling statement about the potential dangers of unconsidered nationalism and unbridled patriotism in the nuclear age.

Susie and I visited John again in 1991, where he surprised us with a gift of this lovely book. John created the book out of his copy of the maquette that he had put together for the 16-page signature for the project. The covers and binding were designed by John, who included bookmaking among his many skills.

POLAROID PROJECT IV. JOHN WOOD.

The following is an excerpt from an essay on John Wood, written by Susie Cohen as part of the collaborative “Polaroid Project” that John participated in with Robert Frank, Dave Heath, Robert Heinecken, and Susie and me in the early 1980s. (Search this site for “Polaroid Project” for more information about this project.)

THE KNUTE ROCKNE OASIS NEWSLETTER & JOURNAL OF CRITICAL OPINION

Vol 1: no. 1 (Sept. 1983)

Editorial Statement

Hi. Susie and I decided to go ahead with the idea that we half-humorously advanced before: to write and xerox a “newsletter” to the folks who are participating in “The Project”. The Knute Rockne Oasis Newsletter will be uncertain in format and irregular in publication. Its purpose is mostly to spread information around to everyone and to keep everyone reminded that the Project advances.

The first piece of information is that the Knute Rockne Oasis is a comfort stop along the Indiana Turnpike and it shows up on the horizon when you need some comfort.

The major item in this issue is Susie’s “letter” to Eelco Wolf. This “letter” is a fictional device that we have adopted to allow us to collect our thoughts during various phases of this event. It might be placed somewhere between a diary entry and a very rough draft of preliminary research. This device allows us a private, even personal “voice” which is frowned on in more scholarly circles. (It will probably become quickly apparent that Susie’s “private voice” is much more elegant than mine).

Let me close this inaugural “editorial statement” with a plea common to editors down through generations… If anyone wants to participate in the Knute Rockne Oasis Newsletter, please jump in.

William Johnson

NEWS & COMMENT

Robert Heinecken and Joyce Neimanas’ new address is: 407 E. Florence Blvd. Englewood, CA. 90301. (213)-672-1561. They apparently survived the move from Chicago.

Susie and my new address is: 123 White St., Belmont, Mass. 02178, (617)-484-3784. We apparently survived the move from Connecticut.

Dave Heath will be spending the week of Sept. 26-30 teaching at the Rhode Island School of Design. He will be showing his latest slide-tape performance to the public, on the 27th. There is a concurrent 40 print exhibition of his most recent work (made since everyone got together in Rochester last April).

Susie and I are gathering copy slides of John Wood’s work to send or show to everyone, which we will do soon. We fell in love with the new Polaroid instant 35mm slides which demonstrate once again that photography is alchemy and thus close to magic. John was also intrigued and has started “experimenting” with them. If anyone else would like to try some out let me know.

August 23, 1983. Dear Eelco,

Bill and I visited John Wood for the first time last week. We spent two days at his home in Alfred, New York as the guests of John and his very charming and hospitable wife, Suzanne. For over twenty years the Woods have lived in an old farmhouse that overlooks the town of Alfred through overgrown and cultivated fields. There is some relatively recent college architecture visible on the slope back into town, and a few neighbors further on up the road; the fields and woods have the atmosphere of quiet that places unmastered by neon possess. Mrs. Wood returned to school when her children were grown, and is now a librarian for the Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred. They are by no means isolated: though physically situated away from the center of town and its cluster of universities, driving (or; in John’s case, biking) into town seems a daily activity. What one senses at their house is not seclusion, but self-sufficiency that they have evolved as a couple. While the house bears evidence of family activity and outgoing hospitality: lawn and gardens, dining areas, childrens’ books, there is also evidence that they live actively for their own interests; Suzanne’s loom, her weavings, and balls of yarn in hand made pots and baskets; the study with books and papers; the potting room; tiny paper animal cut-outs that have found themselves on window sills.

In its attention to detail and its overall eclectic evolution, the house reveals elements of chance, practical elegance, craftsmanship and wide-ranging inquiry that are also elements of John’s art and character. The house is not a “work” however, as these elements are found there as separate solutions or as the unplanned evolutions that emerge from living in one place for a long time. Bill spotted the element of chance in the volunteer strawberry plants growing in cracks of the cement stairs that lead to the front porch. On the porch itself, a post has been hung to support the roof, but the post is 3″ short of its goal, supported in turn by an oval rock. John explained that this is a technique used by Japanese builders to prevent a post from rotting. I don’t really think we noticed it until John, experimenting with the instant slide film we’d brought, made two pictures of it. The slides (we looked at them right after breakfast because it had been too dark the evening we arrived to use the film) showed the upright (half in light, half in shadow, edge highlighted) contrasting the continuously shaded round rock. Simple, lovely. Inside, in the staircase leading from the ground floor to the upstairs bedrooms, the banister is a long, tapered branch, glowing from the handholds of countless passers. The bathroom towel rack is also a branch, rounded and polished in use.

I would not pretend to know them well after so brief a visit, but would suggest that the Woods’ graciousness is a habit not so much of special treatment for guests, but of absorbing the visitors within their full lives. We were obviously an interruption of some routines, yet we felt that there was “room” for our presence and our ideas.

For many years John had used various spaces within the large house as studio space, but several years ago he and his daughter constructed a building in the field just across the road from the house. Though the field is harvested casually by a neighbor for hay, the studio building itself sits in a wild growth of tall grass and flowers visited by birds and butterflies, Chicory, hawkweed, butter-and-eggs and Queen Anne’s Lace grow along the path from the road to the studio. It was idyllic when we were there, but John warned us that Alfred is dismal in the winter, which hangs on in low gray wet skies until April.

John’s studio: one large ground floor room, an el shape, with a small darkroom; storage loft above. Well-lighted with windows and a sky-light. Most of the furniture is old cabinets and work tables, a desk with telephone in one corner. A woodstove, drafting table, one hard-wood chair, a stool, a director’s chair. The stairs to the loft are narrow pyramids set on end to a slanting board.

Books: Miro, Sears catalogue, geometry, stencil patterns, Theodore Roethke; on printmaking and bookbinding. On the walls and window sills: paper stencils, hand made paper birds, shells, stones, pottery, folded paper. On the tables: papers, string, jars of ink. crayons, pencils, color swatches, rulers, fixative, clothespins, magazines, cans. On a beam; jars of tint for making crayons. On one table: a low flat heat box that John uses to make wax color drawings (he built it fearing to use the wood stove for this purpose).

John claims to be an disorganized person, and it is true that the studio is a clutter of tables, piles, paper, bottles, brushes, finished work and work in progress. Yet the ongoing work – in this case, collages on Japanese paper photographically printed in cyan – was spacially and visually distinct. As John began to bring out older work for us to see, he did so from drawers and solander boxes that though heaped with more current materials, were carefully closed and protected. John wraps and handles the work with precise movements made of equal parts of physical and emotional respect for it. I noticed particularly that John’s body arcs around an “area of interest” (whether its the work or a newspaper or an implement) and thus he defines a special and intense enclosure for himself and the onlooker.

In earlier interviews, and to us, John stated that while working, he is often “distracted” from one direction to another by the glimpse of an object or the glimmer of an idea. And we could see that the jars, colors, textures, and shapes of things were casually situated to be suggestive to an open mind. Though our acquaintance is brief, I would like to stress this: that the “disorganization” is a provocation of possibilities, an endless store of manipulable source material. The clutter is a screen in the negative sense only to the extent that it may bother John personally. I suspect, however, that John is himself a screen, and that he instinctively adjusts the mesh to allow through, to see, what it is he needs to work. John is not directionless but multi-directioned. His purpose is less to make than to feel the making, less to finish that to experience. His works, both ongoing and finished, are visually and psychologically forceful expressions for finely distincted feelings and for a variety of forms for them.

John is expert at photography, printmaking, papermaking, painting, drawing, and bookbinding, and these in pure states and in combinations. He often creates or recreates the tools and processes he uses. The most apt term for him would be image-maker. (He feels that “photography” is the silver print, that what he does is closer to “printmaking” in traditional terms. He is worried, and curious, at the categories in which his work has been placed and discussed). At this point in our acquaintance, I would concur with John’s assessment that his training at the Institute of Design is responsible for his openness to and facility with materials, processes and ideas. This training is at least what gave discipline to the creative intentions that were intriguing him and then lured him to the Institute in 1950.

I’m not sufficiently aware of the chronology or diversity of John’s work to describe it well. From what I saw, however, which included ingeniously bound books, black and white and color pencil drawings, paintings, sculpture of sticks and paper, straight silver photographs, collages of photographs and drawings, collages of photographs, collages with words, stencils, etc, I have a preliminary sense of what makes John’s work his.

First, as I mentioned, there is an air of respect about finished works that is not only an attitude of John’s, but emanates as well from the work. Each series, or piece (regardless of its sketch-like quality or polish) is made with an assured hand, the hand of an experienced and careful craftsman. Even the most “experimental” or protean work proceeds from a clarity that demonstrates purpose -even if the ultimate “meaning” is not yet known.

Secondly, there is the fact of the diversity itself. Any material, and surface is a potential “light modulator” (in Moholy’s words). And I think that John’s encompassing attitude toward the potential significance of any scrap of material or ray of light parallels his attitude toward feelings: that there is none too insignificant among human states not worthy of exploration and visual form. It seems that John can evoke “tenderness” as well from three sticks joined in an open pyramid as from moonlight; “terror” from the outline of a gun as well as from the depiction of natural forces; and the exuberance of human motion from the abstract markings of his hand as well as from the literal depiction of the moving figure. Unlike Moholy’s fierce idealism, which projected the camera as the transmitter of modern experience, John’s work is filled with a gentler, but also an uncompromising social purpose. He does not believe that his art, or any art, can change the world directly, especially through specific, cause-related imagery. Yet he has faith that his art, and all art, in the long run, elicits a non-violent, positive response from the sensitive viewer. Though some of his images depict recognizable events or situations (such as the Vietnam war) his art his non-narrative, non-propagandistic. He calls them “quiet protests.” Others of his pieces refer to environmental and other current political concerns such as the preservation of whales and nuclear disarmament. Where Heinecken’s commentary is biting, John’s is fantastical, due to the use of animal shapes and the surrealism of the collage technique. Yet they are penetrating and memorable because of the purity of form and the richness of form combinations. Some of the work, such as the pencil “systems drawings”, some watercolors and paintings, and handmade paper shapes, are pure abstractions. Like the abstract works of Hartley, Marin and O’Keeffe, however, they derive ultimately from the observation of nature rather than from abstract intellect. In the “systems drawings” for instance, the thickness of marks and the layering of tone strongly evoke the careful but pleasurable movement of the hand. The patterning devices are a control, and these were stimulated from an interest in Mimbres pottery.

Another group of abstractions is a series of small watercolors, each the size of a folio account sheet cut in half from a blank “banker’s book” John found. John made a special, cloth-covered box to hold the series. The overall design of each is an open, geometric mesh, constructed with short, bright strokes. Again, the formality of the design is played against the thin/thickness of the outlining strokes and fill-in color. Though John has training as an architecture engineer and can make very precise renderings, these watercolors (and others of his drawings)’show a deliberate skew from mechanical rigidity. He made the brushes for this series from dried yucca stalks. The brushes, still tinted, sit in a clay pot on a window sill.

Although it may be hasty at this point, or even irrelevant, I want to try to categorize John’s work beyond “multi-media humanist”. I’m guessing that there is some central belief at the heart of it: faith not in a hierarchical ordering but faith that there isn’t disorder in the universe. That change observed or made is mysterious but meaningful; that perception of alteration or the proclivity to alter is the human gift.

John is averse to mechanical (photographic) order for its own sake. He has said on several occasions that making his work isn’t meaningful for him unless it incorporates the feelings he has for the people (objects, motion, color) in this work. He is equally shy of the sort of stylized belief that Minor White (whom he knew) developed around photography. Certainly the content of John’s photographs are seen “for what else they are” but John does not use, or advocate the use, of photographs for self-teaching or meditation.

John consistently uses symbolic imagery: stars, whales, guns, tree images of himself and of his friends: certain pastel hues, layered space and photographic puns are repeated formal devices; the marks of his hand with pencil, with paint and in sand are both form and content, John goes to galleries, judges contests, oversees students and is well-versed in art history- But like his house, when he works he is self-sufficient: inventing and borrowing as he needs. He neither follows trends nor cares if he leads them. His work refers occasionally to pictographs, surrealism and popular media. But all of this: symbols, references, forms are only the letters of an alphabet and I haven’t yet grasped whether they make novels or poems or prayers.

John didn’t work much during our visit. We had brought the 4×5 film he requested and stayed awake late one night to try it out and took our portraits with it before we left. The surprise was his response to the Polaroid instant slide film. We had brought it to make record slides but John was intrigued with the quickness of it and with the magic processing box. He liked the cellular quality of the color, and the platinum-like tonal range of the black & white. We left the processor and some film with him. Another “distraction”? I hope so. More soon,

SUSIE.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

Two acknowledged interests of John’s were Buckminster Fuller and the concrete poetry movement, and he referenced both in many images throughout his career.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

At one time John often frequented a local beach, where the waves deposited a layer of white sand over a layer of dark sand, which was erased and reconstituted with each wave, a natural process creating a tabula rasa for the “mark making” that John so loved to do.

The following images are several pages from my informal records of the “retrospective” portion of the exhibition, indicating choices and positioning of that portion of the project. John’s early conceptual sequences, created years before other, better-known artists in California, were a pioneering effort in shifting the paradigm of “creative photography” away from the single print modernist aesthetic, which was one of the criteria we considered when we asked the four artists to participate in the project.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

First meeting as a group, held at Joan & Nathan Lyon’s house in Rochester, NY.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

John was one of the participants who accepted the offer to use the Polaroid 20 x 24” camera in the studio at the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. On this visit John chose to experiment with the color and scale of the large camera, as the last stage in his continuously evolving process of segueing an image through a variety of media and processes to finally reach the completed image. It is entirely possible that some portion of the final collages shown on the studio walls began as the 35mm Polaroid slide film that is described in Susie’s comments on our first visit to his house in 1983.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

Copy of the layout of the images that John created for his 16 page signature that each artist made for the project. The final image is a portrait of one of his grandchildren. For me this sequence was one of John’s “quiet protests,” a poetically visual and subtly unsettling statement about the potential dangers of unconsidered nationalism and unbridled patriotism in the nuclear age.

Susie and I visited John again in 1991, where he surprised us with a gift of this lovely book. John created the book out of his copy of the maquette that he had put together for the 16-page signature for the project. The covers and binding were designed by John, who included bookmaking among his many skills.

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

For more info, Contact William Johnson or Tate Shaw

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DSCN3442

PHOTOGRAPHIC BIBLIOGRAPHY 1835 – 1869.

In 1990 I published a book titled Nineteenth Century Photography. An Annotated Bibliography 1839 – 1879, by William S. Johnson. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co. The book consisted of 962 pages containing approximately 21,000 bibliographic references drawn from 69 American and British periodicals published during that time, plus a sprinkling of references to more contemporary articles about the photographers already listed in the book. The book was published in a very limited edition and went out of print within a year. Subsequently it has been considered by some photographic historians and listed by several sources as an essential reference source to that period.

Photography was from the first considered as one of the four or five major inventions that brought about the truly modern age. I have always wanted to attempt to trace the large and small impacts which the invention of photography had upon the Anglo-American society and its various cultures during the first few decades of the medium’s existence. The 1990 book did that to some extent, but I was never really completely satisfied with it. So, during the past few years I began utilizing the expanded resources which the computer and the internet made available to scan more than 800 magazines and newspapers of every type, from photographic journals to farmer’s journals to women’s magazines to literary magazines to illustrated weekly newspapers and so on, which were published in the United States and in Great Britain from the late 1830s through 1869 for references to photographic practice. I made a good-faith effort to provide a reasonably complete survey of the uses, impacts and influences of photography upon the published periodical literature of America, England, and to some extent elsewhere, from about 1835 to 1869; and thus, hopefully, to provide an outline of the impacts of the medium upon the culture and society of that period of history which played such a critically important role in the development of our own society and culture.

The approximately 450 magazines and newspapers listed below contained articles in which photography was featured, discussed or mentioned in some illuminating manner, or which acknowledged the use of the medium in the creation of at least some of their illustrations. But because it was the custom and practice of many magazines during this time to reprint translations, excerpts, and even entire articles from other magazines, this list of titles fails to actually delineate the exact range of coverage of this project; and articles about individuals and events from French, German and other periodicals do appear in this bibliography as well.

The project is almost done. I am still cleaning up odds and ends, locating missing issues, attempting to correct errors, etc., but essentially this bibliographic project is complete – or at least finished. I feel that this bibliography is far more than a simple listing of published articles and I hope that it does achieve something of what I had wanted to accomplish; by providing any reader with a specific but focused view into the heart of the mid-nineteenth century culture’s ideas and ideals. It certainly provides a richer context and a more complete outline of the dimensions and scope of the uses of the photography of that time than is commonly available at the present.

In the first bibliography, I occasionally included brief excerpts or annotations for those references in which the citation was unclear by itself. But in this project, with so many highly diverse sources, context is a large part of the significant content of the reference. I therefore frequently included larger excerpts or more extensive annotations for each reference. At this point this work, if it were printed today, set in a 10 point Arial typeface, single spaced, with minimum spacing breaks, etc., (In other words, as tight as reasonably possible) the work would run to something over 8000 pages in length.

Now I find myself with something of a problem. As I said, the scale has gotten out of hand. Publishing anything of 8000 pages in hardcopy would be awkward at best. The finished product will have some tighter editing, but, in a very real way, the discursive nature of the project is the project, and I am certainly reluctant to trim titles or references based on their “importance” or alleged “centrality” to photographic history.

At this time in my life I have been working as what is euphuistically known as an “independent scholar.” In other words, without the support structure of any academic institution or within the purview of any academic systems. Although many kind individuals have been most helpful with advice or solutions to some problem or other, there has never been any formal support for this project from any institution or organization. What that means realistically is increased difficulty in accessing resources, and little or no opportunities for research grants, travel grants, sabbaticals, or other means of funding support. At a more subtle level it means that access to individuals with areas of technical expertise or specific skills that might aid the project is also often far more difficult to obtain. The Web is an extraordinary resource tool, but it isn’t everything. At this point this bibliography exists in the form of a Microsoft Word document. I’ve been mulling over the best and most useful way to publish this work and I am asking for suggestions from any interested parties about preferred formats, publication strategies, and the like.

My best idea at the moment is to self-publish the work in hard copy in six or more volumes. These would be divided, with two (or more, if size necessitates) volumes for each decade: 1839-1849 Part A and Part B, 1850-1859 Part A and Part B and 1860-1869 Part A and Part B.

1839-1849 Part A would consist of the journals arranged alphabetically by title, with the citations arranged chronologically under each title. (This is how the samples below are arranged.) This Part would also include brief essays about each magazine’s use of photography, so that the total would constitute an overview of the impacts of photography on the periodical literature of the decade and would provide, in a very minor way, a supplement to Frank Luther Mott’s magnificent multi-volume A History of American Magazines.

1839-1849 Part B would consist of the same materials arranged by subject. Each reference has a subject heading (Most often the name of an artist or an author, or of a photographic organization, an exhibition, or other very simple, limited  subject categories — such as “History: USA: 1861-1865 (US Civil War” and so on.) so, for example, this arrangement would bring all the Mathew B. Brady references for that decade together. (This is the organization followed in the 1990 book.)

Thus 1839-1849 Part A and 1839-1849 Part B together provide two separate modes of access to the materials, and also two ways of viewing the photographic activity (And, incidentally, the publishing activity on this topic.) of each decade. The following decades would be treated similarly, although as the number of references increases throughout each decade, it may become necessary to publish more than two volumes per decade – thus splitting that period up even more.

I will be able to have the first two volumes ready for printing within the year, and will be investigating publishing costs and trying to establish a reasonable price structure and sales strategy for the work. And then if I sell enough to finance the remainder, the other volumes would follow in succession.

I am not completely pleased with this strategy, as it limits key-word access and other possiblities that contemporary electronic systems make available to researchers. I’ve considered publishing in some electronic format, but my expectation is that libraries – which I assume would be the major market for this reference work– would resist publication in any cd or dvd format, as that format will undoubtedly become obsolete in the (near) future. And I simply don’t have the level of expertise necessary to control the product to publish it on-line, so I hesitate there as well.

I WOULD APPRECIATE ANY COMMENTS OR SUGGESTIONS ABOUT POSSIBLE WAYS OF PROCEEDING FROM THIS POINT –ADVICE ON USEFUL WAYS OF MANIPULATING THE INFORMATION IN WAYS MOST USEFUL FOR OTHER SCHOLARS, ISSUES OF IMPLEMENTING PUBLICATION, POSSIBLE MARKETING STRATEGIES, ETC.

THANK YOU.

BELOW IS A LIST OF THE MAGAZINES AND JOURNALS INDEXED IN THIS DATABASE AS WELL AS A SMALL SAMPLE OF REFERENCES DRAWN FROM TWO OF THE MAGAZINES, WHICH WERE SELECTED AT RANDOM.

LIST OF INDEXED TITLES

The dates following a title listed below correspond to the run of that title only as they fall within the period of coverage of the project (1835-1869), and thus correspond to a record of the coverage of the bibliography—not of the complete run of the periodical.

ABSTRACTS OF THE PAPERS COMMUNICATED TO THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1851-1854) London, England

ACADEMY (1869) London, England.

ADVOCATE OF PEACE AND UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD (1846) Washington, DC  title change to  ADVOCATE OF PEACE (1847-1869) Washington, DC

AFRICAN REPOSITORY (1850-1869) Washington, DC

ALBION, A JOURNAL OF NEWS, POLITICS AND LITERATURE (1822-1869) New York, NY

ALTA CALIFORNIA (1850-1861) San Francisco, CA

AMARANTH, OR TOKEN OF REMEMBRANCE FOR 18__. (1847-1855) Ashland, OH

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, BOSTON. MEMOIRS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS  AND SCIENCES. (1839-1869) Boston, MA

AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST (1842-1851) New York, NY

AMERICAN ALMANAC AND REPOSITORY OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE (1830-1861) Boston, MA

AMERICAN ART JOURNAL. A WEEKLY RECORD OF MUSIC, ART AND LITERATURE (1866-1867) New York, NY

AMERICAN ECLECTIC; OR, SELECTIONS FROM THE PERIODICAL LITERATURE OF ALL FOREIGN COUNTRIES  (1839-1843) see ECLECTIC MAGAZINE OF FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1833-1869) New York, NY

AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY (1864-1867). New York, NY   title change to   AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY, AND NEW YORK TEACHER (1867) New York, NY   title change to   NEW YORK TEACHER AND AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY

AMERICAN FARMER, AND SPIRIT OF THE AGRICULTURAL JOURNALS OF THE DAY (1839-1869) Baltimore, MD

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION (1855-1869) Hartford, CT

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MUSIC & MUSICAL VISITOR (1844-1846) Boston, MA

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACY (1835-1869) Philadelphia, PA

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE ALLIED ARTS & SCIENCES (1858-1867) New York, NY

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND ARTS (1859-1869) New Haven, CT

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES (1827-1869) Philadelphia, PA

AMERICAN LAW REGISTER (1852-1869)

AMERICAN LAW REVIEW (1866-1869). St. Louis, MO

AMERICAN LITERARY GAZETTE AND PUBLISHERS CIRCULAR (1855-1869) Philadelphia, PA

AMERICAN LITERARY MAGAZINE (1847-1849) Hartford, CT

AMERICAN MASONIC REGISTER AND LITERARY COMPANION (1839-1847) Albany, NY

AMERICAN NATURALIST (1867-1869) Salem, MA

AMERICAN PEOPLE’S JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND ART (1850) New York, NY

AMERICAN PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL AND MISCELLANY (1839-1850) Philadelphia, PA   title change to   AMERICAN PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL: A REPOSITORY OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND GENERAL   INTELLIGENCE (1851-1860) Philadelphia, PA   title change to   AMERICAN PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL AND LIFE ILLUSTRATED: A REPOSITORY OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE,   AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE (1861-1869) Philadelphia

AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN AND THEOLOGICAL REVIEW (1863-1868). New York, NY   title change to   AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN REVIEW (1869-1871). New York, NY

AMERICAN PUBLISHERS’ CIRCULAR AND LITERARY GAZETTE (1855-1862) Philadelphia, PA

AMERICAN QUARTERLY CHURCH REVIEW AND ECCLESIASTICAL REGISTER (1858-1870) New Haven, CT

AMERICAN RAILWAY TIMES (1849-1859) Boston, MA   title change to   RAILWAY TIMES (1860-1872) Boston MA

AMERICAN REPERATORY OF ARTS, SCIENCES AND MANUFACTURES (1840-1842) New York, NY

AMERICAN REVIEW: A WHIG JOURNAL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE, ART AND SCIENCE (1845-1852) New York, NY

AMERICAN THEOLOGICAL REVIEW (1859-1862). New York, NY

ANALYST: A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE, NATURAL HISTORY, AND THE FINE ARTS   (1834-1840) London, England

ANGLO AMERICAN, A JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, NEWS, POLITICS, THE DRAMA, FINE ARTS, ETC (1843-1847)   New York, NY

ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY, OR YEAR-BOOK OF FACTS IN SCIENCE AND ART (1850-1870) Boston, MA

ANNUAL REPORT OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, FOR THE  YEARS …. (1840-1869)   New York, NY

ANTHROPOLOGICAL REVIEW (1863-1869) London, England

ANTI-TEAPOT REVIEW (1864-1869) London, England

APPLETON’S JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1869) New York, NY

ARCTURUS. A JOURNAL OF BOOKS AND OPINION (1840-1842) New York, NY

ARGOSY: A MAGAZINE OF TALES, TRAVELS, ESSAYS, AND POEMS (1865-1869) London, England

ARISTIDEAN: A MAGAZINE OF REVIEWS, POLITICS, AND LIGHT LITERATURE (1845) New York, NY

ARMY AND NAVY CHRONICLE (1839-1842) Washington, DC

ART-UNION: MONTHLY JOURNAL OF THE FINE ARTS AND THE ARTS DECORATIVE, ORNAMENTAL (misc)   (1839-1848) London, England   title change to   ART JOURNAL (1849-1869) London, England

ARTIST: A MONTHLY LADY’S BOOK (1842-1843) New York, NY

ARTHUR’S HOME MAGAZINE (1852-1898)   title change to ARTHUR’S LADY’S HOME MAGAZINE (1857-1860)   title change to   ARTHUR’S HOME MAGAZINE (1861-1869) Philadelphia, PA

ARTHUR’S LADIES’ MAGAZINE OF ELEGANT LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS (1844-1845) Philadelphia, PA

ATHENAEUM (LONDON) (1830-1869) London, England

ATHENAEUM (BOSTON) (misc) (1832-????) Boston, MA

ATLANTIC MONTHLY: A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART AND POLITICS (1857-1865) Boston, MA   title change to   ATLANTIC MONTHLY: A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, ART AND POLITICS (1865-1969) Boston, MA

BALLOU’S DOLLAR MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1855-1862) Boston, MA   title change to   DOLLAR MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1863-1865) Boston, MA   title change to   BALLOU’S MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1866-1869) Boston, MA

BALLOU’S PICTORIAL DRAWING-ROOM COMPANION (1855-1859) see GLEASON’S

BALTIMORE LITERARY MONUMENT (1838-1839) Baltimore, MD

BALTIMORE PHOENIX AND BUDGET (1841-1842). Baltimore, MD

BANKERS’ MAGAZINE AND STATE FINANCIAL REGISTER (1846-1849) Baltimore, MD

BANKERS’ MAGAZINE AND STATISTICAL REGISTER (1849-1869) New York, NY

BEADLE’S MONTHLY, A MAGAZINE OF TODAY (1866-1867) New York, NY

BEAUX-ARTS. L’INDUSTRIE (misc)

BELGRAVIA: A LONDON MAGAZINE (1866-1869) London, England

BELLE ASSEMBLEE; OR COURT AND FASHIONABLE MAGAZINE (1823-1837) London, England   title change to   COURT MAGAZINE AND BELLE ASSEMBLEE (July 1832-Jan. 1837)   title change to   THE COURT MAGAZINE AND MONTHLY CRITIC (Feb. 1837-Dec. 1837)   title change to   THE COURT MAGAZINE AND MONTHLY CRITIC, AND THE LADY’S MAGAZINE AND MUSEUM (Jan. 1838-Dec.   1838)   title change to COURT AND LADY’S MAGAZINE, MONTHLY CRITIC AND MUSEUM (1839-1848) London, England

BENTLEY’S QUARTERLY REVIEW (1859-1860) London, England

BIBLICAL REPERTORY AND PRINCETON REVIEW see PRINCETON REVIEW

BLACKWOOD’S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE (1839-1869) Edinburgh, Scotland

BLACKWOOD’S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE (NY) (misc) (1839-1869) New York, NY

BOSTON CULTIVATOR (1839-1850) Boston, MA

BOSTON DAILY EVENING TRANSCRIPT (misc) Boston, MA

BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT (misc) Boston, MA

BOSTON HERALD (misc) Boston, MA

BOSTON MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL (1828-1851) Boston, MA

BOSTON MISCELLANY OF LITERATURE AND FASHION (1842-1843) Boston, MA

BOSTON RECORDER (1830-1849) Boston, MA

BOSTON WEEKLY MAGAZINE. DEVOTED TO MORAL AND ENTERTAINING LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE   FINE ARTS (1838-1841) Boston, MA

BRADSHAW’S MANCHESTER JOURNAL (1841) London, England   title change to   BRADSHAW’S JOURNAL: A MISCELLANY OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART (1842-1843) London, England

BRITISH AND FOREIGN REVIEW; OR, EUROPEAN QUARTERLY JOURNAL (1835-1844) London, England

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY (1860-1869) Liverpool, London, England

BROADWAY JOURNAL (1845-1846) New York, NY

BROTHER JONATHAN. A WEEKLY COMPEND OF BELLES LETTRES AND THE FINE ARTS, STANDARD   LITERATURE, AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE (1842-1843) New York, NY

BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN ART-UNION (1848-1853) New York, NY

BULLETIN DE L’AMI DES ARTS (misc)

BURTON’S GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE AND AMERICAN MONTHLY REVIEW (1839-1840) Philadelphia, PA   see also GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE (1840-1856)

CALIFORNIA CULTURIST: A JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, MECHANISM AND MINING   (1859-1860) San Francisco, CA

CAMPBELL’S FOREIGN MONTHLY MAGAZINE; OR, SELECT MISCELLANY OF THE PERIODICAL LITERATURE OF   GREAT BRITAIN (1842-1843) Philadelphia, PA

CASSELL’S MAGAZINE

CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH (1831-1846) Cincinnati, OH

CATHOLIC WORLD, A MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF GENERAL LITERATURE AND SCIENCE (1865-1869) New York, NY

CHAMBERS’S EDINBURGH JOURNAL (1832-1853) London, England   title change   CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ARTS (1854-1869)

CHEMIST; OR, REPORTER OF CHEMICAL DISCOVERIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, AND PROTECTOR OF THE   RIGHTS OF THE CHEMIST AND CHEMICAL MANUFACTURERAND CHEMICAL MANUFACTURER.   title change to   CHEMIST; A MONTHLY JOURNAL OFCHEMICAL PHILOSOPHY. AND OF CHEMISTEY APPLIED TO THE ARTS,   MANUFACTURES, AGRICULTURE, AND MEDICINE, AND RECORD OF PHARMACY. (  ) London, England

CHARLESTON MERCURY (1861-1865 only) Charleston, SC

CHICAGO MAGAZINE. THE WEST AS IT IS (1857) Chicago, IL

CHICAGO MEDICAL EXAMINER (1860-1869) Chicago, IL

CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE AND JOURNAL (1839-1865) Chicago, IL

CHRISTIAN EXAMINER AND RELIGIOUS MISCELLANY (1844-1857) New York, NY

CHRISTIAN INQUIRER (1846-1864) New York, NY

CHRISTIAN OBSERVATORY: A RELIGIOUS AND LITERARY MAGAZINE (1847-1850) Boston, MA

CHRISTIAN OBSERVER (1840-1860) Louisville, KY

CHRISTIAN PARLOR MAGAZINE (1844-1855) New York, NY

CHRISTIAN RECORDER (1861-1869) Philadelphia, PA

CHRISTIAN REFLECTOR (1838-1848) Boston, MA

CHRISTIAN REGISTER AND BOSTON OBSERVER (1835-1843) Boston, MA   title change to   CHRISTIAN REGISTER (1843-1850) Boston, MA

CHRISTIAN REVIEW (1836-1863) Boston, MA

CHRISTIAN WATCHMAN (1839-1848) Boston, MA

CHURCH REVIEW, AND ECCLESIASTICAL REGISTER (1848-1858) New Haven, CT

CINCINNATI DAILY CHRONICAL (misc) Cincinnati, OH

CINCINNATI WEEKLY HERALD AND PHILANTHROPIST (1843-1846) Cincinnati, OH

CLASSICAL MUSEUM: A JOURNAL OF PHILOLOGY, AND OF ANCIENT HISTORY AND LITERATURE (1844-1850)   London, England

COLMAN’S RURAL WORLD (1865-1869) St. Louis, MO

COLORED AMERICAN (1837-1841) New York, NY

COLUMBIAN LADY’S AND GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, EMBRACING LITERATURE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT:   EMBELLISHED WITH THE FINEST STEEL AND MEZZOTINT ENGRAVINGS, MUSIC, AND COLORED FASHIONS   (1844-1849) New York, NY

COMMERCIAL REVIEW OF THE SOUTH AND WEST (1846-1850) New Orleans, LA

CONGREGATIONAL QUARTERLY. CONDUCTED UNDER THE SANCTION OF THE CONGREGATIONAL LIBRARY   ASSOCIATION AND THE AMERICAN CONGREGATIONAL UNION. (1859-1869)

CONNECTICUT COMMON SCHOOL JOURNAL AND ANNALS OF EDUCATION, (1851-1866) Hartford, CT

CONTINENTAL MONTHLY: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE AND NATIONAL POLICY (1862-1864) New York, NY

CORSAIR: A GAZETTE OF LITERATURE, ART, DRAMATIC CRITICISM, FASHION & NOVELTY (1839-1840)   New York, NY

COSMOPOLITAN ART JOURNAL (1856-1861) New York, NY

CRAYON (1855-1861) New York, NY

CRITERION. LITERARY AND CRITICAL JOURNAL. (1855-1856) New York, NY

CRITIC, LONDON LITERARY JOURNAL (1851) London, England

CULTIVATOR (1834-1865) Albany, NY

DAGUERREIAN JOURNAL (1850-1851) New York, NY   title change to   HUMPHREY’S JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY, AND THE ALLIED ARTS AND SCIENCES (1852-1862) New York, NY

DAGUERREOTYPE: A MAGAZINE OF FOREIGN LITERATURE AND SCIENCE: COMPILED CHIEFLY FROM THE   PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS OF ENGLAND, FRANCE, AND GERMANY (1847-1849). Boston, MA

DAILY SCIENTIFIC PRESS (   ) ??

DEBOW’S REVIEW, AGRICULTURAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL PROGRESS AND RESOURCES (1846-1869)   New Orleans, LA

DIAL: A MAGAZINE FOR LITERATURE, PHILOSOPHY, AND RELIGION (1840-1844) Boston. MA

DISTRICT SCHOOL JOURNAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK (1840-1852) Albany, NY

DOLLAR MAGAZINE (1851) see HOLDEN’S DOLLAR MAGAZINE

DOLLAR MAGAZINE; A MONTHLY GAZETTE OF CURRENT LITERATURE, MUSIC AND ART (1841-1842) New York,   NY

DOLLAR MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1863-1865) see BALLOU’S DOLLAR MONTHLY MAGAZINE

DOUGLASS’ MONTHLY (1859-1862) Rochester, NY

DRAMATIC MIRROR AND LITERARY COMPANION (1841-1842) New York, NY

DUBLIN REVIEW (1839-1869) London, England

DUBLIN SATURDAY MAGAZINE: A JOURNAL OF INSTRUCTION AND AMUSEMENT, COMPRISING IRISH   BIOGRAPHY AND ANTIQUITIES, ORIGINAL TALES AND SKETCHES, POETRY, VARIETIES, ETC. (1865-1867)   Dublin, Ireland

DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE (1839-1869) Dublin, Ireland

DUBUQUE DAILY EXPRESS AND HERALD (misc) Dubuque, IA

DUFFY’S HIBERNIAN MAGAZINE: A MONTHLY JOURNAL OF LEGENDS, TALES, AND STORIES, IRISH   ANTIQUITIES, BIOGRAPHY, SCIENCE, AND ART (1860-1864) Dublin, Ireland.

DWIGHTS AMERICAN MAGAZINE, AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER, FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE   AND MORAL AND RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLE (1845-1851) New York

EAST ANGLIAN, OR, NOTES AND QUERIES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH THE COUNTIES OF SUFFOLK, CAMBRIDGE, ESSEX AND NORFOLK

ECLECTIC MAGAZINE OF FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1833-1869) New York, NY   first published as   MUSEUM OF FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1839-1842)   title change to   AMERICAN ECLECTIC AND MUSEUM OF FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (Jan. 1843–Jan. 1844)   title change to   ECLECTIC MAGAZINE OF FOREIGN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1844–1869) New York, NY

ECLECTIC REVIEW (1839-1868) London, England

EDINBURGH REVIEW, OR CRITICAL JOURNAL (1830-1869) Edinburgh, Scotland

EDINBURGH REVIEW (AMERICAN EDITION) (    ) New York, NY

EMANCIPATOR AND REPUBLICAN (1844-1850) BOSTON, MA

EMERSON’S MAGAZINE AND PUTNAM’S MONTHLY see PUTNAM’S MONTHLY

EPISCOPAL RECORDER (1831-1851) Philadelphia, PA

EVANGELICAL MAGAZINE AND GOSPEL ADVOCATE (1830-1848) Utica, NY

EVERGREEN: A MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF NEW AND POPULAR TALES AND POETRY (1840-1841) New York, NY

EVERY SATURDAY: A JOURNAL OF CHOICE READING, SELECTED FROM FOREIGN CURRENT LITERATURE   (1866-1874) Boston, MA

EXPOSITOR, A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE, LITERATURE (1838-1839)   New York, NY

FAMILY CIRCLE & PARLOR ANNUAL (misc.) New York, NY

FAMILY MAGAZINE; OR, MONTHLY ABSTRACT OF GENERAL KNOWLEDGE (1833-1841) New York, NY

FARMER’S MAGAZINE (1840-1869) London, England

FARMERS’ REGISTER: A MONTHLY PUBLICATION (1833-1843) Shellbanks, VA

FLAG OF OUR UNION (1854-1869) Boston, MA

FINE ARTS ALMANACK, OR, ARTIST’S REMEMBRANCER FOR THE YEAR (1850-1852) London, England

FINE ARTS QUARTERLY REVIEW (1863-1867) London, England

FINE ARTS’ JOURNAL; A WEEKLY RECORD OF PAINTING, SCULPTURE, ARCHITECTURE, MUSIC, THE DRAMA,   AND POLITE LITERATURE. (1846-1847) London, England

FOEDERAL AMERICAN MONTHLY (1865) New York, NY

FOREIGN AND COLONIAL QUARTERLY REVIEW (1843-1844) London, England   title change to   NEW QUARTERLY REVIEW; OR, HOME, FOREIGN AND COLONIAL JOURNAL (1844-1847) London, England

FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW (1827-1846) London, England   title change to   WESTMINSTER AND FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW. (1846-1847)

FORRESTER’S BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ MAGAZINE, AND FIRESIDE COMPANION (1851-1857) Boston, MA

FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW (1865-1869) London, England

FRANK LESLIE’S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER (     ) New York, NY

FRANK LESLIE’S NEW YORK JOURNAL (     ) New York, NY

FREDERICK DOUGLASS’ PAPER (1851-1860) Rochester, NY

FREED-MAN: A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE FREED COLOURED PEOPLE   (1866-1868) London, England

FRIEND; A RELIGIOUS AND LITERARY JOURNAL (1839-1869) Philadelphia, PA

FRIENDS’ REVIEW; A RELIGIOUS, LITERARY AND MISCELLANEOUS JOURNAL (1847-1869) Philadelphia, PA

FRIENDS’ WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER (1844-1853) Philadelphia, PA   title change to   FRIEND’S INTELLIGENCER (1853-1869) Philadelphia, PA

GALAXY. A MAGAZINE OF ENTERTAINING READING (1866-1869) New York, NY

GENESEE FARMER (1845-1865) Rochester, NY

GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (1830-1869) London, England

GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (1837-1839) Philadelphia, PA

GERMAN REFORMED MESSENGER (1851-1867) Philadelphia, PA

GLASGOW MECHANICS’ MAGAZINE  (    ) Glasgow, Scotland

GLEASON’S PICTORIAL DRAWING-ROOM COMPANION (1851-1854) Boston, MA   title change to   BALLOU’S PICTORIAL DRAWING-ROOM COMPANION (1855-1859) Boston, MA

GODEY’S LADY’S BOOK (1840-1858) New York, NY   title change to   GODEY’S LADY’S BOOK AND MAGAZINE (1859-1869) New York, NY

GOLDEN HOURS: AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE FOR FAMILY AND GENERAL READING (1868-1869)   London, England

GOOD WORDS (1860-1869) London, England

GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE (1840-1858) Philadelphia, PA   continues BURTON’S GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE AND AMERICAN MONTHLY REVIEW (1839-1840)   suffered many title and subtitle changes throughout its run   GRAHAM’S LADY’S AND GENTLEMEN’S MAGAZINE (1841-1842, 1843-1844)   to   GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1843)   to   GRAHAM’S AMERICAN MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND FASHION (1844-1856)   to   GRAHAM’S ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE (1856-1858) Philadelphia, PA

GREAT REPUBLIC MONTHLY (1859) New York, NY

GREEN MOUNTAIN GEM; A MONTHLY JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS (1843-1849) Bradford

HARBINGER: DEVOTED TO SOCIAL AND POLITICAL PROGRESS (1845-1849) New York, NY

HARPER’S BAZAAR (1867-1869) New York, NY

HARPER’S NEW MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1850-1869) New York, NY

HARPER’S WEEKLY: A JOURNAL OF CIVILIZATION (1857-1869) New York, NY

HERALD OF HEALTH AND JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CULTURE (1864-1869) New York, NY

HERALD OF TRUTH, A MONTHLY PERIODICAL DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF RELIGION (1847) Cincinnati, OH

HESPERIAN: A MONTHLY MISCELLANY OF GENERAL LITERATURE, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED (1838-1839)   Cincinnati, OH

HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, AND NOTES AND QUERIES CONCERNING THE ANTIQUITIES, HISTORY, AND   BIOGRAPHY OF AMERICA (1857-1869) Boston, MA

HOGG’S WEEKLY INSTRUCTOR (1845-1849) Edinburgh, Scotland   title change to   HOGG’S INSTRUCTOR. (1849-1856)   title change to   TITAN. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1856-1859)

HOLDEN’S DOLLAR MAGAZINE OF CRITCISMS, BIOGRAPHIES, SKETCHES, ESSAYS, TALES, REVIEWS,   POETRY, ETC., ETC. (1848-1851) New York, NY   title change to   DOLLAR MAGAZINE (1851) New York, NY

HOME FRIEND (1852-1856) London, England

HOME JOURNAL: FOR THE CULTIVATION OF THE MEMORABLE, THE PROGRESSIVE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL   (1846-1869) New York, NY

HORTICULTURIST AND JOURNAL OF RURAL ARTS AND RURAL TASTE (1846-1869) Albany, NY

HOURS AT HOME; A POPULAR MONTHLY OF INSTRUCTION AND RECREATION (1865-1869) New York, NY

HOUSEHOLD WORDS CONDUCTED BY CHARLES DICKENS (1850-1859) London, England

HUMPHREY’S JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY see DAGURREIAN JOURNAL

HYGIENIC TEACHER AND WATER-CURE JOURNAL (1862) New York, NY

ILLUMINATED MAGAZINE (1843-1845) London, England

ILLUSTRATED AMERICAN NEWS (    ) New York, NY

ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS (1842-1869) London, England

ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF ART (1853-1854) New York, NY

ILLUSTRATED NEWS (LONDON) (1848?-1869?) London, England

ILLUSTRATED NEWS (NEW YORK) (1853) New York, NY

ILLUSTRATED NEWS OF THE WORLD AND DRAWING ROOM PORTRAIT GALLERY OF EMINENT PERSONAGES ()   London, England

IMPERIAL MAGAZINE (1826) London, England

INDEPENDENT (1848-1869) New York, NY

INTELLECTUAL OBSERVER: REVIEW OF NATIONAL HISTORY, MICROSCOPIC RESEARCH AND RECREATIVE   SCIENCE (1862-1868) London, England

INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND SCIENCE (1850-1852) New York, NY

IMPERIAL MAGAZINE; OR, COMPENDIUM OF RELIGIOUS, MORAL, & PHILOSOPHICAL KNOWLEDGE (1819-1834)   London, England

JOHN – DONKEY (1848) New York, NY

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY (1859, 1870) New York, NY

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ORIENTAL SOCIETY (1843-1869) Boston, MA

JOURNAL OF BELLES LETTRES (1832-1842) Philadelphia, PA

JOURNAL OF CLASSICAL AND SACRED PHILOLOGY (1854-1856) Cambridge, England

JOURNAL OF SACRED LITERATURE (1848-1855) London. England   title change   JOURNAL OF SACRED LITERATURE AND BIBLICAL RECORD (Apr. 1855-Jan. 1868) London, England

JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE, CONTAINING THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (1869)   New York, NY

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY (1859, 1870) New York, NY

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ORIENTAL SOCIETY (1843-1869) New Haven, CT

JOURNAL OF THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1864-1870) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1848-1856) London, England   Continued by   TRANSACTIONS OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1861-1869   Continued by   JOURNAL OF THE ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1869) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE FRANKLIN INSTITUTE, OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE   MECHANIC ARTS; DEVOTED TO MECHANICAL AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE, CIVIL ENGINEERING, THE ARTS AND   MANUFACTURES, AND THE RECORDING OF AMERICAN AND OTHER PATENT INVENTIONS (1828-1851)   Philadelphia, PA

JOURNAL OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY (    ) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY OF LONDON (    ) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1832-1869) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARTS (LONDON) London, England

JOURNAL OF THE STATISTICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1838-1869) London, England

KALEIDOSCOPE; OR, LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC MIRROR (1820-1831) Liverpool, England

KIDD’S LONDON JOURNAL (1852) London, England   title change to   KIDD’S OWN JOURNAL [with vol. 1:9 (Feb. 28, 1852)] (1852-1854) London, England

KNICKERBOCKER; OR NEW YORK MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1833-1862) New York, NY   title change to

KNICKERBOCKER MONTHLY; A NATIONAL MAGAZINE (1863) New York, NY

LADIES’ COMPANION, A MONTHLY MAGAZINE; DEVOTED TO LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS (1834-1843)   title change to   LADIES’ COMPANION, AND LITERARY EXPOSITOR; A MONTHLY MAGAZINE EMBRACING EVERY DEPARTMENT   OF LITERATURE (1843-1844) New York, NY

LADIES’ GARLAND AND FAMILY WREATH (1837-1850) Philadelphia, PA

LADIES’ PEARL (1840-1842) Lowell, MA

LADIES REPOSITORY, AND GATHERINGS OF THE WEST (1841-1848) Cincinnati,OH   title change to   LADIES REPOSITORY: A MONTHLY PERIODICAL DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, ARTS AND RELIGION (1849-1871)   Cincinnati, OH

LADIES’ WREATH, A MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, INDUSTRY AND RELIGION (1846-1859) New York, NY

LADY’S HOME MAGAZINE (1857-1860) Philadelphia, PA   see also ARTHUR’S HOME MAGAZINE

LADY’S WESTERN MAGAZINE AND GARLAND OF THE VALLEY (1849) Cincinnatti, OH

LANCET (1839-1869) London, England

LEISURE HOUR: A FAMILY JOURNAL OF INSTRUCTION AND RECREATION (1852-1869) London, England

LIBERATOR (1831-1865) Boston, MA

LIBERTY BELL. BY FRIENDS OF FREEDOM (1839-1858) Boston, MA

LIPPINCOTT’S MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND EDUCATION (1868-1869) Philadelphia, PA

LITERARY GAZETTE, AND JOURNAL OF THE BELLES LETTRES (     ) ??

LITERARY UNION; A JOURNAL OF PROGRESS, IN LITERATURE AND EDUCATION, RELIGION AND POLITICS,   SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE (1849-1850). Syracuse, NY

LITERARY WORLD (1847-1853). New York, NY

LITTELL’S LIVING AGE (1844-1869) Boston, MA

LIVERPOOL & MANCHESTER PHOTOGRAPHIC JOURNAL [BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY] (   )

LONDON AND EDINBURGH PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE (1832-1840) London, England   title change to LONDON, EDINBURGH AND DUBLIN PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE (1840-1869) London, England

LONDON JOURNAL AND WEEKLY RECORD OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART (1845-1869) London, England

LONDON JOURNAL OF ARTS, SCIENCES, & MANUFACTURERS & REPERTORY OF PATENT INVENTIONS   (1839-1854)   title change   NEWTON’S LONDON JOURNAL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES (1855-1866) London, England

LONDON POLYTECHNIC MAGAZINE, AND JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, LITERATURE, AND THE FINE ARTS (1844)   London, England

[LONDON] QUARTERLY REVIEW (1838-1869) London, England

LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW (Sept. 1853-Jan. 1858)   title change   LONDON REVIEW (Apr. 1858-July 1862)   title change   LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW (Oct. 1862-Jan. 1932) London, England

LONDON READER: OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, ART AND GENERAL INFORMATION (1863-1869) London, England

LONDON SATURDAY JOURNAL (1839-1842) London, England

LOWELL OFFERING (1840-1845) Lowell, MA

MACMILLAN’S MAGAZINE (1859-1869) London, England

MAGAZINE FOR THE MILLION (1844) New York, NY

MAGAZINE OF ART (    )  ???

MAGAZINE OF SCIENCE AND SCHOOL OF ARTS (1839-1849)   title change   MAGAZINE OF SCIENCE, AND ARTISTS’, ARCHITECTS’ AND BUILDERS’ JOURNAL (1850-1852) London, England

MAGNET: DEVOTED TO THE INVESTIGATION OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY (   ) ??

MAGNOLIA; OR, SOUTHERN APALACHIAN (1842-1843) Charleston, SC

MAINE FARMER AND JOURNAL OF THE USEFUL ARTS (1833-1842) Augusta, ME   title change to   MAINE FARMER AND MECHANICS ADVOCATE (1842-1843) Augusta, ME   title change to   MAINE FARMER: A FAMILY NEWSPAPER, DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, MECHANIC ARTS, LITERATURE,   GENERAL INTELLIGENCE, &C., &C. (1844-1869) Augusta, ME

MARYLAND MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL, AND OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OF   THE ARMY AND NAVY OF THE UNITED STATES (1840)

MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOCIETY. MEDICAL COMMUNICATIONS (1839-1869) Boston, MA

MASSACHUSETTS PLOUGHMAN AND NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE (1840-1869) Boston, MA

MASSACHUSETTS QUARTERLY REVIEW (1847-1850) Boston, MA

MASSACHUSETTS TEACHER (1848-1855)   title change   MASSACHUSETTS TEACHER AND JOURNAL OF HOME AND SCHOOL EDUCATION (1856-1871). Boston, MA

MATHEMATICAL MONTHLY (1858-1861) Cambridge, MA

MECHANICS’ MAGAZINE, MUSEUM, REGISTER, JOURNAL, AND GAZETTE (1838-1858) London, England

MEDICAL AND SURGICAL REPORTER: A WEEKLY JOURNAL (1858-1869) Philadelphia, PA

see NEW JERSEY MEDICAL REPORTER AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SOCIETY

MEDICAL EXAMINER (1838-1842) Philadelphia, PA   title change to   MEDICAL EXAMINER AND RECORD OF MEDICAL SCIENCE (1844-1853) Philadelphia, PA   title change to   MEDICAL EXAMINER (1854-1856) Philadelphia, PA

MEDICAL NEWS (1843-1869) New York, NY

MERCERSBURG REVIEW (1849-1852) Lancaster, PA   title change to   MERCERSBURG QUARTERLY REVIEW (1853-1856) Lancaster, PA   title change to   MERCERSBURG REVIEW (1857-1869) Lancaster, PA

MERCHANTS’ MAGAZINE AND COMMERCIAL REVIEW (1839-1870) New York, NY

MERRY’S MUSEUM (1841-1851) Boston, MA   title change   MERRY’S MUSEUM AND PARLEY’S MAGAZINE (1852-1857)   title change   MERRY’S MUSEUM, PARLEY’S MAGAZINE, WOODWORTH’S CABINET, AND THE SCHOOLFELLOW (1858-1866)   title change   MERRY’S MUSEUM AND WOODWORTH’S CABINET (1867-1867)   title change MERRY’S MUSEUM FOR BOYS AND GIRLS (1868-1869). Boston, MA

METHODIST QUARTERLY REVIEW (1841-1869) New York, NY

MICHIGAN FARMER (1843-1869) Detroit, MI

MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION (1822-1847) London, England   title change to   MIRROR MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1847-1849) London, England

MISSIONARY HERALD, CONTAINING THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR   FOREIGN MISSIONS FOR THE YEAR . (1839-1869) Boston, MA

MISSIONARY MAGAZINE (BAPTIST) (1850-1872) Boston, MA

MONTHLY CHRONICLE OF EVENTS, DISCOVERIES, IMPROVEMENTS, AND OPINIONS. INTENDED FOR THE   POPULAR DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE, AND AN AUTHENTIC RECORD OF FACTS FOR FUTURE   REFERENCE (1840-1842) Boston, MA

MONTHLY LAW REPORTER (1848-1866) Boston, MA

MONTHLY RELIGIOUS MAGAZINE (1844-1856) Boston, MA   title change to   MONTHLY RELIGIOUS MAGAZINE AND INDEPENDENT JOURNAL (1856-1861) Boston, MA   title change to   MONTHLY RELIGIOUS MAGAZINE (1861-1869) Boston, MA

MORRIS’S NATIONAL PRESS, A JOURNAL FOR HOME (1846) New York, NY

MUSICAL MAGAZINE; OR, RESPOSITORY OF MUSICAL SCIENCE, LITERATURE AND INTELLIGENCE (1839-1842)   Boston, MA

MUSICAL TIMES AND SINGING CLASS CIRCULAR (1844-1869) London, England NAUSSAU MONTHLY (1842-1847) Princeton, NJ   title change ..NASSAU LITERARY MAGAZINE (1848-1869). Princeton, NJ

NATION (1861-1869) New York, NY

NATIONAL ERA (1847-1860). Washington, DC

NATIONAL MAGAZINE; DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, ART, AND RELIGION (1852-1858) New York, NY

NATIONAL POLICE GAZETTE (1845-1869) New York, NY [INCOMPLETE]

NATIONAL PREACHER AND VILLAGE PULPIT (1858-1866) New York, NY

NATIONAL REVIEW (1855-1864) London, England.

NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW, AND QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SCIENCE. (1854-1865) London, England

NEW ENGLAND FAMILY MAGAZINE (1845) Boston, MA

NEW ENGLAND FARMER; A MONTHLY JOURNAL (1848-1869) Boston, MA

NEW-ENGLAND HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL REGISTER (1847-1869) Boston, MA

NEW ENGLANDER (1843-1869) New York, NY

NEW JERSEY MEDICAL REPORTER AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SOCIETY (1847-1854)   title change to   NEW JERSEY MEDICAL REPORTER (1855) Burlington, VT

NEW MIRROR (1843-1844) New York, NY

NEW PATH (1863-1865) New York, NY

NEW SPORTING MAGAZINE (1839-1869) London, England

NEW WORLD; A WEEKLY FAMILY JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, ART AND NEWS (1840-1845)   New York, NY

NEW YORK DAILY CHRONICAL (misc) New York, NY

NEW YORK EVANGELIST (1830-1869) New York, NY

NEW YORK EVENING POST (misc) New York, NY

NEW YORK HERALD (1861-1865 only) New York, NY

NEW YORK ILLUSTRATED ANNUAL (1847) New York, NY

NEW YORK ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1845-1847) New York, NY

NEW YORK ILLUSTRATED NEWS (misc) New York, NY

NEW YORK JOURNAL OF MEDICINE AND COLLATERAL SCIENCES (1843-1856) New York, NY   title change to   NEW YORK JOURNAL OF MEDICINE (1856-1860). New York, NY

NEW YORK OBSERVER AND CHRONICLE (1840-1869) New York, NY

NEW YORK REVIEW (1837-1842) New York, NY

NEW YORK STATE MECHANIC, A JOURNAL OF THE MANUAL ARTS, TRADES, AND MANUFACTURES (1841-1843)   Albany, NY

NEW YORK TEACHER AND AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY (1868-1869) New York, NY see AMERICAN   EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY (1864-1867). New York, NY

NEW YORK TIMES (1851-1869) New York, NY [INCOMPLETE]

NEW YORK WEEKLY HERALD (1840-1857) New York, NY

NEW-YORK LEGAL OBSERVER, CONTAINING REPORTS OF CASES DECIDED IN THE COURTS OF EQUITY AND   COMMON LAW, AND IMPORTANT DECISIONS IN THE ENGLISH COURTS; ALSO, ARTICLES ON LEGAL   SUBJECTS, WITH A TABLE OF CASES, A GENERAL INDEX, AND A DIGEST OF THE REPORTS (1842-1854)   New York, NY

NEW-YORK MIRROR: A WEEKLY GAZETTE OF LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS (1839-1842) New York, NY

NEW-YORKER. A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, POLITICS, STATISTICS AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE   (1836-1841) New York, NY

NEWTON’S LONDON JOURNAL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES (1855-1866) London, England

see LONDON JOURNAL OF ARTS, SCIENCES, & MANUFACTURERS & REPERTORY OF PATENT INVENTIONS

NILES’ NATIONAL REGISTER (1837-1849) Baltimore, MD

NORTH AMERICAN MISCELLANY; A WEEKLY MAGAZINE OF CHOICE SELECTIONS FROM THE CURRENT   LITERATURE OF THIS COUNTRY AND EUROPE (1851). New York,   title change to   NORTH AMERICAN MISCELLANY AND DOLLAR MAGAZINE (1851-1852). New York, NY

NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW (1839-1869) Boston, MA

NORTH BRITISH REVIEW (1844-1871) Edinburgh, Scotland

NORTH STAR (1847-1851) Rochester, NY

NOTES AND QUERIES (1849-1869) London, England

OHIO CULTIVATOR (1845-1866) Columbus, OH

OHIO FARMER (1856-1869) Cleveland, OH

OHIO MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL (1848-1869) Columbus, OH

OLD GUARD: A MONTHLY DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF 1776 AND 1787 (1863-1870) New York, NY

OLIVER OPTIC’S MAGAZINE. OUR BOYS AND GIRLS (1867-1869) Boston, MA

ONCE A WEEK (1859 – 1869) London, England

ONEIDA CIRCULAR (1851-1869) Brooklyn, NY

ORION, A MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1842-1844) Penfield, GA

OUR YOUNG FOLKS. AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE FOR BOYS AND GIRLS (1865-1873) Boston, MA

OVERLAND MONTHLY AND OUT WEST MAGAZINE (1868-1869) San Francisco, CA

PALLADIUM: A MONTHLY JOURNAL OF LITERATURE, POLITICS, SCIENCE AND ART (1850-1851)   Edinburgh, Scotland

PATHFINDER (1843) New York, NY

PENNY ILLUSTRATED NEWS (1849-1850) London, England

PENNY MAGAZINE OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE (1832-1845)   London, England

PEOPLE’S JOURNAL (1846-1847) London, England

PEOPLE’S MAGAZINE AN ILLUSTRATED MISCELLANY FOR ALL CLASSES (1867-1869) London, England

PETERSON’S MAGAZINE (1849-1869) Philadelphia, PA

PHILADELPHIA ART-UNION REPORTER (1851) Philadelphia, PA

PHILADELPHIA PHOTOGRAPHER (1864-1869) Philadelphia, PA

PHILANTHROPIST (1836-1843) Cincinnati, OH

PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1666-1869) London, England

PHOTOGRAPHIC ART JOURNAL (1851-1853) New York, NY   title change to   PHOTOGRAPHIC AND FINE ART JOURNAL (1854-1860) New York, NY

PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS (1858-1859, 1860-1865) London, England

PIONEER; OR, CALIFORNIA MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1854-1855) San Francisco, CA

PLOUGH, THE LOOM AND THE ANVIL (1848-1857) Philadelphia, PA

POPULAR SCIENCE REVIEW (1861-1869) London, England.

POUGHKEEPSIE CASKET: A SEMI – MONTHLY LITERARY JOURNAL, DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THE   DIFFERENT BRANCHES OF POLITE LITERATURE (1836-1841) Poughkeepsie, NY

POWDER MAGAZINE (1868-1869) London, England

PRACTICAL MECHANIC’S JOURNAL (    ) London, England

PRAIRIE FARMER (1843-1869) Chicago, IL

PRINCETON REVIEW (1837-1869)

PRISONER’S FRIEND. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO CRIMINAL REFORM, PHILOSOPHY, SCIENCE,   LITERATURE, AND ART (1845-1857) Boston, MA

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA (1842-1869) Philadelphia, PA

PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY (1838-1869) Philadelphia, PA

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1855-1869) London, England

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1855-1869) London, England

PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF LONDON (1843-1864) London, England

PROVIDENCE JOURNAL (misc) Providence, RI

PROVINCIAL FREEMAN (1854-1857) Chatham, Canada West

PUTNAM’S MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART (1853-1857) New York, NY   title change to   EMERSON’S MAGAZINE AND PUTNAM’S MONTHLY (1857-1858) New York, NY   title changed to   PUTNAM’S MAGAZINE. ORIGINAL PAPERS ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, ART AND NATIONAL INTERESTS   (1868-1870). New York, NY

QUARTERLY REVIEW (    ) ??

QUARTERLY STATEMENT OF THE PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND (1869) London, England

RADICAL (1865-1872). Boston, MA

RAGGED SCHOOL UNION MAGAZINE (1849-1869) London, England

RAILWAY TIMES (1860-1872) Boston MA see AMERICAN RAILWAY TIMES

RECREATIVE SCIENCE: A RECORD AND REMEMBRANCER OF INTELLECTUAL OBSERVATION (1859-1862) ..title change to   THE INTELLECTUAL OBSERVER. REVIEW OF NATURAL HISTORY MICROSCOPIC RESEARCH, RECREATIVE   SCIENCE (1862-1868)   title change to   THE STUDENT AND INTELLECTUAL OBSERVER (1868-1869) London, England

REFORMED CHURCH MESSENGER (1867-1874) Philadelphia, PA

REPORT OF THE NINTH MEETING OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE.   PART 2. NOTICES AND ABSTRACTS OF COMMUNICATIONS (    ) London, England

REYNOLD’S MISCELLANY OF ROMANCE, GENERAL LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART (1846-1869)   London, England

RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY (1867-1870) New York, NY

ROBERT MERRY’S MUSEUM (1841-1850) Boston, MA   title change to   MERRY’S MUSEUM AND PARLEY’S MAGAZINE (1852-1857) Boston, MA   title change to   MERRY’S MUSEUM, PARLEY’S MAGAZINE, WOODWORTH’S CABINET, AND THE SCHOOLFELLOW (1858-1866)   title change to   MERRY’S MUSEUM AND WOODWORTH’S CABINET (1867-1867) Boston, MA   title change to   MERRY’S MUSEUM FOR BOYS AND GIRLS (1868-1869) Boston, MA

ROSE, THE SHAMROCK AND THE THISTLE (1862-1865) Edinburgh, Scotland.

ROUND TABLE. A SATURDAY REVIEW OF POLITICS, FINANCE, LITERATURE, SOCIETY AND ART   (1863-1869). New York, NY

ROVER: A WEEKLY MAGAZINE OF TALES, POETRY, AND ENGRAVINGS, ALSO SKETCHES OF TRAVEL, HISTORY   AND BIOGRAPHY (1843-1845). New York, NY

RUSSELL’S MAGAZINE (1857-1860) Charleston, SC

SAN FRANCISCO ALTA (misc) San Francisco, CA

SARGENT’S NEW MONTHLY MAGAZINE, OF LITERATURE, FASHION, AND THE FINE ARTS (1843) New York, NY

SARTAIN’S UNION MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1849-1852) Philadelphia, PA   previously UNION MAGAZINE (1847-1848) New York, NY

SATURDAY EVENING POST (1839-1869) Philadelphia, PA

SATURDAY MAGAZINE (1838-1844) London, England

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN (1845-1869) New York, NY

SCOTTISH REVIEW. A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PROGRESS & GENERAL LITERATURE (1853-1863)   Glasgow, Scotland

SHARPE’S LONDON MAGAZINE, A JOURNAL OF ENTERTAINMENT AND INSTRUCTION FOR GENERAL READING   (1845-1849) London, England

SILLIMAN’S JOURNAL see AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND ARTS

SOUTHERN AGRICULTURIST AND REGISTER OF RURAL AFFAIRS (1828-1839) Charleston, SC   title change   SOUTHERN CABINET OF AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, RURAL AND DOMESTIC ECONOMY (1840)   Charleston, SC

SOUTHERN AND WESTERN LITERARY MESSENGER AND REVIEW (1846-1847) Richmond, VA

SOUTHERN AND WESTERN MONTHLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW (1845) Charleston, SC

SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER (1834-1845) Richmond, VA title change to   SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER; DEVOTED TO EVERY DEPARTMENT OF LITERATURE, AND THE FINE   ARTS (1848-1864) Richmond, VA

SOUTHERN PLANTER (1841-1866) Richmond, VA   title change to   SOUTHERN PLANTER AND FARMER (1867-1869) Richmond, VA

SOUTHERN QUARTERLY REVIEW (1842-1857) New Orleans, NO

SPECTATOR (misc) London, England

SPHINX (1868-1869) Manchester, England

SPIRIT OF THE TIMES; A CHRONICLE OF THE TURF, AGRICULTURE, FIELD SPORTS, LITERATURE AND THE   STAGE (1835-1861) New York, NY

STRYKER’S AMERICAN REGISTER AND MAGAZINE (1850-1851) Philadelphia, PA

SUNDAY AT HOME (1854-1869) London, England

TAIT’S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE (1839-1860) Edinburgh, Scotland

TEMPLE BAR: A LONDON MAGAZINE FOR TOWN AND COUNTRY READERS (1860-1869) London, England

THEOLOGICAL AND LITERARY JOURNAL (1848-1861) New York, NY

TRAIN: A FIRST-CLASS MAGAZINE (1856-1858) London, England

TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY (1839-1869) Philadelphia, PA

TRANSACTIONS OF THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON (1863) London, England (1863) see JOURNAL OF THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON .(1864-1870) London, England

TRANSACTIONS OF THE HISTORIC SOCIETY OF LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. (1849-1869) Lancashire, England.

TRANSACTIONS OF THE SOCIETY OF ARTS, MANUFACTURES, AND COMMERCE (1839-1843/44) London, England

TRUMPET AND UNIVERSALIST MAGAZINE (1839-1851) Boston, MA

TWICE A WEEK: AN ILLUSTRATED LONDON JOURNAL OF ENTERTAINING LITERATURE AND USEFUL   INFORMATION (1862-1862) London, England

UNION MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1847-1848) New York, NY   see SARTAIN’S UNION MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE AND ART (1849-1852). Philadelphia, PA

UNITED STATES CATHOLIC MAGAZINE AND MONTHLY REVIEW (1844-1848). Baltimore, MD

UNITED STATES MAGAZINE & DEMOCRATIC REVIEW (1837-1851) New York, NY   title change to   DEMOCRATIC REVIEW (Jan.–Dec. 1852) New York, NY   title change to   THE UNITED STATES REVIEW (1853-1856) New York, NY   title change to   UNITED STATES DEMOCRATIC REVIEW (1856-1859) New York, NY

UNITED STATES MAGAZINE OF SCIENCE, ART, MANUFACTURES, AGRICULTURE, COMMERCE AND TRADE   (1854-1856) New York, NY   title change to   UNITED STATES MAGAZINE (1856-1857) New York, NY

UNITED STATES SERVICE MAGAZINE (1864-1866) New York, NY

UNIVERSAL REVIEW (1859-1860) London, England

UNIVERSALIST QUARTERLY AND GENERAL REVIEW (1844-1869) Boston, MA

UNIVERSALIST WATCHMAN, REPOSITORY AND CHRONICLE (1831-1847) Woodstock, VT

VALLEY FARMER (1849-1864) St. Louis, MO

VANITY FAIR (1859-1863) New York, NY

VILLAGE RECORD (1860-1867) West Chester, PA

VIRGINIA HISTORICAL REGISTER, AND LITERARY NOTE BOOK (1850-1851) Richmond, VA

WATER-CURE JOURNAL (1845-1861) New York, NY

WELLMAN’S LITERARY MISCELLANY (1849-1851) Detroit, MI

WESLEYAN-METHODIST MAGAZINE (1835-1869) London, England

WESTERN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, MECHANIC ARTS, INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT,   COMMERCE, AND GENERAL LITERATURE (1848-1851) St. Louis, MO   title change to   WESTERN JOURNAL AND CIVILIAN; DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, MECHANIC ARTS,   INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT, COMMERCE, PUBLIC POLICY, AND POLITE LITERATURE (1851-1856) St. Louis, MO

WESTERN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (1840-1855). Louisville, KY

WESTERN LAW JOURNAL (1843-1853) Cincinnati, OH

WESTERN LITERARY CABINET (1853-1854) Detroit, MI

WESTERN LITERARY MESSENGER. A FAMILY MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, ART, MORALITY, AND   GENERAL INTELLIGENCE ( 1847-1857) Buffalo, NY

WESTERN QUARTERLY REVIEW (1849). Cincinnati, OH

WESTMINSTER REVIEW (1839- 1869) London, England

YALE LITERARY MAGAZINE. CONDUCTED BY THE STUDENTS OF YALE UNIVERSITY (1836-1851) New Haven, CT

YANKEE DOODLE (1846-1847). New York, NY

YEARBOOK OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS ALMANAC (1864-1869) London, England

YOUNG AMERICA! ORGAN OF THE NATIONAL REFORM ASSOCIATION (1845-1848) New York, NY

YOUTH’S COMPANION (1827-1869) Boston, MA

ZION’S HERALD (1839-1841) Boston, MA   title change to   ZION’S HERALD AND WESLEYAN JOURNAL (1842-1867) Boston, MA   title change to   ZION’S HERALD (1868-1869)

@@@

BELOW ARE A COUPLE OF PAGES TAKEN FROM THE EXISTING FILE – WHICH NEEDS PROOFING – BUT WHICH SHOWS SOMETHING OF THE MATERIALS….

GENESEE FARMER: A MONTHLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE & HORTICULTURE, DOMESTIC AND RURAL ECONOMY (1845-1865) Rochester, NY

Edited by Daniel Lee and D. D. T. Moore. Rochester, NY Publisher and Proprietor.

For the type of publication, profusely illustrated with woodcuts, a very occasional steel engraving tipped –in.

indexed

[1845-1865 all?]

HALL, H. P. (SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY) see also EXHIBITIONS. 1847. NEW YORK STATE FAIR. (GENESEE FARMER, Nov. 1847)

EXHIBITIONS. 1847. SARATOGA. NEW YORK STATE FAIR.

“Premiums Awarded at the New York State Fair, 1847.” GENESEE FARMER 8:11 (Nov. 1847): 262-265. [Awards, organized by classes—“Cattle,” “Fat Cattle,” “Horses,” “Domestic Manufactures,” “Needle, Shell, and Wax Work,” “Flowers,” etc. Discretionary Premiums were awarded to, among others, “…H. P. Hall, Saratoga Springs, Daguerreotype,…” p. 265.]

UNKNOWN. USA. 1849.

1 b & w (“G. Pratt.”) GENESEE FARMER 10:2 (Feb. 1849): frontispiece. [“Engraved by T. I. Roy.” Not credited, but from a daguerreotype.]

MCDONALD, ALEXANDER. (BUFFALO, NY)

“Editor’s Table. Daguerreotypes of Devon Cattle.” GENESEE FARMER 10:4 (Apr. 1849): 96. [“We are indebted to Wm. Garbutt, Esq., of Wheatland, for Daguerreotypes of a pair of four year old Steers, and a two year old Heifer, (Devons,) owned by E. P. Beck, of Sheldon, Wyoming county. The animals represented received the first premium (in each class, as grass fed animals,) at the State Fair at Buffalo, in September last. The “counterfeit presentments” are quite natural and life like, and creditable to the artist— Alex. McDonald, of Buffalo. The likenesses can be seen at our office.”]

EXHIBITIONS. 1849. SYRACUSE, NY. NEW YORK STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.

“Agricultural Societies. New York State Agricultural Society. Judges on the Premium List”. GENESEE FARMER 10:6 (June 1849): 148. [“At a meeting of the Executive Committee of this Society, held in Syracuse on the 10th of May, the following Judges were appointed for the Annual Show,—to be held in that city on the 11th, 12th and 13th days of September next:—… Animal Paintings, Paintings And Daguerreotypes.— T. R. Walker, Utica; E. P. Prentice, Albany; A. Stevens, New York….”]

BROWN & HOWARD. (ROCHESTER, NY)

[Advertisement.] “Daguerreotypes that are Daguerreotypes.” GENESEE FARMER 11:8 (Aug. 1850): 199. [“Brown & Howard’s Emporium Daguerrean Gallery, No. 9, second floor Gould Buildings. Having opened a splendid Gallery in the Gould Block, would respectfully invite the public and all those wishing good likenesses, to give us a call, and we will assure them they will not waste time and money, as is often the case. Our Gallery is furnished in a style of unusual splendor, equal to any in the State. The walls are adorned with some of the finest works of Art, both of pencil and the engraver. Strangers visiting the city, and having a few leisure hours, will be simply rewarded by a visit to our Gallery, which will be kept open during all business hours. Please call and examine for yourselves. Wm. Brown, John Howard. The undersigned takes this method of informing the citizens of Rochester and vicinity that by the solicitations of many citizens, he has been induced to return to the city for the purpose of making it a place of permanent location. Having been absent from the city for one year, and in constant practice, experimenting in the above named Art, has now returned better qualified than ever, not only to sustain, but to excel my former reputation as an Artist., being well known in this city and vicinity, as formerly principal operator in Mercer’ & Co.’s Gallery, corner of Main and St. Paul streets, would now respectfully invite my old friends, and the public generally, to call on No. 9 Gould Buildings, where you can see likenesses that will speak for themselves. W. Brown.” (This ad ran several times in 1850.)]

UNKNOWN. USA. 1852.

Campbell, George, of West Minister, Vt. “French Merino Sheep.” GENESEE FARMER 13:8 (Aug. 1852): 247-249. 2 b & w. [Illustrated with portraits of two herds of sheep, engraved from daguerreotypes. “I send you a wood cut, engraved from a Daguerreotype, of a group of French sheep imported by Wm. Chamberlain, Esq., of Red Hook, of your state, and myself, one year since…” ]

BOOKS. 1858. see also BY COUNTRY. USA. 1858. (GENESEE FARMER, Sept. 1858)

BY COUNTRY. USA. 1858.

“Notices of Books, Pamphlets, &c.” GENESEE FARMER 19:9 (Sept. 1858): 291. [Book review. The New American Cyclopedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge. Edited by George Ripley and Charles A. Dana. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1858. “It is nearlt thirty years since a complete Cyclopedia was published in this country; since that time we have doubled both our population and our area—peopled the Gold Regions—discovered a new Continent—gone through a war—buried our third generation of great Statesmen, in Clay, Calhoun, Webster and Benton—built towns like Chicago, all our Railways, our Ocean Steamers, our Iron Houses (sic Horses]—invented the Photograph, the Electric Telegraph, and the Lightning Press—introduced cheap Postage, steel Pens, gummed Envelopes, Lucifer Matches, Ice, Omnibuses, Chloroform, etc., etc. These matters are all dealt with in this work…”]

UNKNOWN. GREAT BRITAIN. 1860.

“White Sprouting Broccoli.” GENESEE FARMER 21:2 (Feb. 1860): 64-65. 1 b & w. [From London Gardner’s Chronicle. “…The annexed representation of an individual of the present season, and therefore of the fourth generation, engraved from a photograph, will show what the new race has become…”]

UNKNOWN. USA. 1861.

Presbrey, Otis. F. “The Ontario Grape.” GENESEE FARMER 22:4 (Apr. 1861): 121. 1 b & w. [“Eds. Genesee Farmer:–Knowing the interest taken by your journal in Grape culture, I send you for insertion a cut from a photograph of a cluster of the Ontario Grape. This new variety originated in Canada, near Lake Ontario, from which it was named….”]

UNKNOWN. AUSTRIA. 1860.

“The Cultivation of a Grape Vine.” GENESEE FARMER 24:4 (Apr. 1863): 122-123. 1 b & w. [From the Journal d’Agriculture Pratique. Full-page engraving “A Grape Vine, Engraved after a Photograph made at Chateau Mornay (Vienna,) bearing 30 Bunches of Grapes on the ‘Fruit’ Canes and 6 on the ‘Wood’ Canes.”]

BY COUNTRY. USA. 1863.

“Miscellaneous.” GENESEE FARMER 24:9 (Sept. 1863): 288. [“Why are photographers the most uncivil of all trades-people? Because when we make application for a copy of our portrait the always reply with a negative.”]

BY COUNTRY. USA. 1861-1864 (US CIVIL WAR)

[Advertisement.] “Just What Everybody Wants.” GENESEE FARMER 25:3 (May 1864): 99. [Our New Pocket Album. [For Soldier and Civilian.] Holding sixteen pictures, is the cheapest and the best Pocket Album ever offered to the public. Sent by mail to any address, post paid, on receipt of Seventy-five cents. It can be filled with pictures (16) and sent by mail to soldiers in the army, or friends anywhere in Uncles Sam’s dominions, at the very trifiling sum of Thirty Cents postage. Orders promptly filled by Samuel Bowles & Company, Photograph Album Manufacturers, Springfield, Mass.”]

BY COUNTRY. USA. 1865.

[Advertisement.] “100 Photographs of Union Generals.” GENESEE FARMER 26:11 (Nov. 1865): 358. [“…sent postpaid for 25 cents; 100 Photographs of Handsome Ladies for 25 cents; 100 Photographs of Actors for 25 cents; 50 photographs of Rebel Officers for 25 cents. Address C. R. Seymour, Holland, Erie Co., N. Y.”]

ZZZ

GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (1830-1869) London, England

Previous Title(s): the Gentleman’s Magazine: or, Monthly Intellegencer / Jan. 1731-Dec. 1735

Originally Published: London: Chatto & Windus, 1731-1907. The Gentleman’s Magazine: continues the Gentleman’s Magazine: and historical review (1856-1868), the Gentleman’s Magazine: and historical chronicle (1731-1833) and the Gentleman’s Magazine: or monthly intelligencer (1731-1735).

Mitford, John, editor, 1834-1850; Nichols, John Gough, editor, 1851-1856; Parker, John Henry, editor, 1857-1865; Hatton, Joseph, editor, 1868-1873.

Description: 123 v. bill., chart, facsims., maps, plans, plates (part col.), ports., tables. 22cm.

Fearful of losing the lead in technological innovation and industrialization to other European rivals, and under Price Albert’s goading, a major effort was extended throughout Great Britain during the 1850s-1860s to encourage the diffusion of knowledge in the arts and sciences throughout all segments of British society. One facet of this effort was the establishment and growth of numerous organizations or societies, established and fostered by the literate professional classes, and tied to the encouragement of learning in specific disciplines or fields of study. Antiquities research and archaeological studies held an active interest among the educated and leisured class in Britain during the 1850s-1860s. The Gentleman’s Magazine, whose demographic was drawn from this group, became the journal of record for a number of these local and national organizations; which met regularly—often on a monthly schedule. Often the same individuals who perused these studies throughout the 1850s also practiced amateur photography in order to use this vital new tool for their research. The reports of many of these meetings frequently includes notations of the use of photographs for research and reporting of the discoveries in these disciplines, and therefore provides an indicator of the increasing reliance that these sciences placed upon photography.

The journal was reorganized with both a new publisher and a new editor in 1866. “For, whilst The Gentleman’s Magazine will continue to preserve its high antiquarian character, it is the intention of its new managers, in concert with a large circle of able and accomplished friends on whose aid they can rely, to include, as far as may be, matters of present interest, and to secure for its readers all necessary information respecting the chief subjects of the day as they arise. In the New Series a much larger space will be devoted to current literature than has of late years been the case; and its reviews will embrace a wider range of subjects, including not only History, Antiquities, and Architecture, but also Art and Science, Biography, Personal Memoirs, Philology, Music and the Drama, Natural History, and Theology in its uncontroversial aspects. Fiction and Politics alone will be excluded. ‘Svlvanus Urban ‘ also desires to lay open his columns much more extensively than hitherto to Original Correspondence, especially on matters of genealogy, topography, heraldry, local antiquities, personal and family history, folk-lore, philology, &c. ” Increased care will be taken to make the ‘ Monthly Intelligence,” Gazette Appointments,’ &c.,’ Births, Marriages, and Obituary ‘ (including authentic Memoirs), as perfect a record as possible of the changes that are being daily worked by the silent hand of Time among the upper and middle classes of society;…” (Gentleman’s Magazine ns 1 (Jan. 1866): iv.) The effect was to present a more modern magazine, dealing with a larger range of contemporary issues, while retaining much of the concerns and feel of the traditional contents. Reports of the activities of the existing antiquarian and anthropological societies were broadened to include even more organizations. For example, the July 1866 issue devoted eighteen pages of texts to reports of the meetings of twenty-one national and four local societies –ranging from the Royal Asiatic Society to the Zoological Society; from the Royal Society (London) to the Yorkshire Philosophical Society and including such diverse interests as Astronomy, Horticulture, Literature, Geology, Geography, Numismatics, and Statistics. In fact, a major new contributor publicly proclaimed a sustained amateur interest in photography, and he always included information about photography in his new column, “Scientific Notes of the Month”as well as publishing several well-informed articles which display the reach and impact of the medium on contemporary society.

In 1868 the magazine was revamped again, following guidelines set down in its “Preface” “…But if the man who is not educating himself to the last hour of his life is a fool, the magazine whose life has doubled the allotted span of man’s, will, in refusing to obey the signs of the times which it records, display that which is not wisdom. It is no longer desirable, it is indeed scarcely possible, for a monthly magazine to comprise the features which, when periodical literature was scant and bad, the promoters of The Gentleman’s Magazine not unsuccessfully sought to present. Politics, Science, Art, have been beckoned to more removed ground, each has its many able organs, and each requires a diffuseness and an exactitude which are impossible in a miscellany…. The learned societies are admirably attended to by learned editors with special endowments, and that department of literature which is called criticism is represented almost to excess. Therefore we abandon work which we could not perform to advantage. But we believe that we see plenty of other work ready to our hand….” (entirely new series vol. 1 (June 1868): 2-3.)

From the 1850s on the Gentleman’s Magazine was well-illustrated, usually by engravings from drawings of archeological items or topographical views of architectural structures. These illustrations were occasionally credited to be from photographic sources. As the editors prided themselves in the accuracy of their scientific renderings and they wished to duplicate the original artist’s work with the least amount of transcription distortions from drawing to engraving; the magazine used early photoengraving techniques as soon as they became available in the early 1860s in order to reproduce some or all of these hand-drawn illustrations. By the end of the decade, shifts in editorial policy to popularize the magazine had decreased this emphasis and more general illustrations began to appear, including even some narrative scenes or portraits to illustrate fictional stories.

Two vols. per year. Volume numbers never given in the magazine, and often applied erratically in the volume title page, so I have just used the date, which was always on the title-page of the issue.)

indexed

vol. 100 (Jan 1830) – vol. 103 (Dec. 1833)

ns vol. 1 (Jan. 1834) – ns vol. 45 (June 1856)

vol. 201 (July 1856) – vol. 207 (Dec. 1859)

vol. 208 (Jan. 1860) – vol. 219 (Dec. 1865)

ns vol. 1 (Jan. 1866) – ns vol. 3 (Jan. –May 15, 1868) [vol. 224 (May 1868)]

entirely ns 1 (June – Nov. 1868) ns 2 (Dec. 1868 —  May 1869) –entirely ns 3 (June –Nov. 1869) [vol. 225 — vol. 227.] (Dec. 1869)

 

1832

DAGUERRE.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. The Diorama, Regent’s Park.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (July 1832): 63-64. [“The Diorama has opened with two new views—a landscape and an interior. The former is of Paris, taken from the heights of Montmartre, and has been painted by Daguerre with fidelity and care, but without any aim at fine effect. In the foreground, however, the windmills of Montmartre are painted with great power. The second view ii of a gallery in the singular and celebrated Campo Santo at Pisa. ‘The Campo Santo is an enclosure planted with Cyprus trees and myrtles, surrounded by sixty arcades of white and black marble, horizontally laid, and forming a rectangular parallelogram. Its longest sides are erected on twenty-seven pillars, and admit the light through semicircular arches in the galleries, which are ornamented with paintings in fresco, upon sacred subjects, by the oldest Tuscan masters, and are further adorned by upwards of 600 sepulchral monuments, belonging to the most illustrious families in Pisa, and by magnificent sarcophagi, mostly of Parian marble, brought from Constantinople and Greece, besides a great number of other interesting monuments.’ It is one of those long galleries that the present picture represents; the heavy beams of its roof are uncovered; through the orifices in one of its walls the light is admitted; on the opposite one are the fresco paintings; below, and along each side, are arranged the monuments and relics of antiquity. The painting of this curious subject is by Bouton.”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Domestic Occurrences. Alphabetical List of the New House of Commons, Appointed to Meet Jan. 29, 1833. England and Wales.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Dec. 1832): Supplement pp. 641-643. [“…All those places marked thus *, being forty-two in number, are newly-created Boroughs. Where there are two or more Members, they are placed according to the order in which they stood on the poll at the time of election. …Chippenham — —J. Neeld, W. H. F. Talbot….”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Domestic Occurrences. Promotions, Preferements, &c. Marriages.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Dec. 1832): Supplement p. 644. [“…Dec… 20. At All Souls, Langham-place, Henry Fox Talbot, esq. M.P. of Lacock Abbey, co. Wilts, to Constance, youngest dau. of F. Mundv, esq. of Markeaton, co. Derby….”]

1835

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Domestic Occurrences. Births.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (June 1835): 654. [“…Apr.   25. In Sackville street, the wife of H. Fox Talbot, esq., of Lacock Abbey, Wilts., a dau.–…”]

1836

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Apr. 1836): 411. [“March 10. F. Bailey, esq. Treas. V.P. Edw. John Johnson, esq. Commander R.N. was elected Fellow. Read, Researches on the Integral Calculus, by Henry Fox Talbot, esq.; and Report of Magnetic Experiments tried on board a steam vessel, made by order of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, by Commander E. J. Johnson, R.N….”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. British Association for the Advancement of Science.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Oct. 1836): 409-413. [“…Section A, for Mathematical and Physical Science… Thursday, Aug. 25… On the Integral Calculus, by H. Fox Talbot, esq.;…” p. 409.]

1837

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Jan. 1837): 78. [“…Nov. 30. This was the anniversary meeting; his Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex, Pres. in the chair…. The election of Council and officers for the ensuing year then took place:—… Other Members of the Council.—G. B. Airy, esq. A.M.; W. Allen, Esq.; J. Bostock, M.D.; the Earl of Burlington; S. H. Christie, esq.; Vise. Cole, M.P.; J. H. Green, esq.; G. B. Greenough, esq.; W. Lawrence, esq.; J. Lindley, Ph.D.; J. W. Lulibock, esq. M.A.; Rev. G. Peacock, M.A.; W. Hasledine Pepys, esq.; Rev. A. Sedgwick, M.A.; W. H. Smyth, Capt. R.N.; W. H. Fox Talbot, esq.” “…Dec. 15. W. Lawrence, esq. in the chair. A paper was read, entitled, “Further Observations on the Optical Phenomena of Crystals,” by W. H. F. Talbot, esq.”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Births and Marriages. Births.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Apr. 1837): 423. [“….Mar.    16 …, the wife of H. Fox Talbot, esq., of Lacock Abbey, Wilts., a dau.–…”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Obituary. Rear-Admiral Fielding.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE. (Oct. 1837): 425. [“Sept. 2. At Richmond, aged 57, Rear- Admiral Charles Fielding, R.N. He was a great-grandson of Basil fourth Earl of Denbigh, being the only son of Commodore Charles Fielding, R. N. (younger son of Col. The Hon. Charles Fielding, brother to William fifth Earl), by Frances, daughter of the Rt. Hon. William Finch, and sister to George Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham. He attained post rank in the West Indies, Jan. 15, 1802; and returned home in the Andromeda frigate on the 24th Sept. following. He subsequently commanded the Circe of 28 guns, which was wrecked on the Lemon and Ower, whilst in chase of an enemy, Nov. 16, 1803. His next appointment was to the Sea Fencibles at Queenborough; and he afterwards commanded the Revolutionnaire frigate. He was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral in the present year. He married, April 24, 1804, Lady Elizabeth-Theresa, widow of William Davenport Talbot, esq. of Lacock Abbey, Wilts, and sister to the present Earl of Ilchester and the Marchioness of Lansdowne. By that lady, who survives him (and who was mother, by her first marriage, of the present William Henry Fox Talbot, esq. F.R.S. of Lacock Abbey, late M.P. for Chippenham) he had issue two daughters: 1. The Right Hon. Caroline Viscountess Valletort, who was married in 1831 to Ernest-Augustus Viscount Valletort, heir apparent to the Earl of Mount-Edgcumbe, and has issue a son and heir, born in 1832; and 2. Horatia, who is unmarried.”]

1838

BREWSTER, SIR DAVID. see also HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN. (GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, Oct. 1838)

WHEATSTONE, PROF. see also HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN. (GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, Oct. 1838)

HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. British Association for the Advancement of Science.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Oct. 1838): 419 -431. [“The Eighth meeting of this Association was opened at Newcastle on Saturday the 18th of August. The Earl of Burlington, the President of last year, being absent on the continent, Professor Whewell, V. P. took the chair; when the Secretary, the Rev. J. Yates, read the Report of the Council. …The following list of the officers of sections, recommended by the Council, was approved of by the meeting:— Section A.—Mathematics and Physics; meeting in the Lecture-room of the Philosophical Society. President, Sir John Herschel; Vice-Presidents, Sir David Brewster, Sir William Hamilton, Rev. Dr. Robinson, and Mr. F. Baily, Secretaries, Major Sabine, Rev. Professor Chevalier, and Professor Stevelly…. Sir John Herschel laid before the Section, — 1. ” Reduced Observations of 1232 Nebulae and Clusters of Stars, made in the years 1834, 5, G, 7, 8, at the Cape of Good Hope, with the 20-feet reflector; 2. Reduced Observations of 1192 Double Stars of the Southern Hemisphere; 3. Micrometrical Measures of 407 principal Double Stars of the Southern Hemisphere, made at the Cape, with a 7-fect achromatic equatorial telescope; 4. A list of the approximate places of 15 Planetary and Annular Nebulae of the Southern Hemisphere, discovered with the 20-feet reflector; and 5. Drawings illustrative of the appearance and structure of:i principal Nebulee in the Southern Hemisphere.”… Wednesday… Sir David Brewster read a paper on some Preparations of the Eye, by Mr. Clay Wallace, of New York; and another on a new kind of Polarity in Homogeneous Light, by himself; Sir W. R. Hamilton made a communication relative to the Propagation of Light in vacua; Sir J. Herschel, a Note on the structure of the vitreous humour of the Eye of the Shark; and Mr. Ball, of C. C. Cambr. a paper, On the meaning of the arithmetical symbols for Zero and Unity, when used in general symbolical algebra…. Thursday. On Subterranean Temperature; and a notice of a Brine Spring, near Kissingten, Bavaria, which emits carbonic acid gas, by Prof. Forbes; A description of a Substitute for the Mountain Barometer in measuring Heights, by Sir John Robison; A communication respecting Halley’s Comet, by Sir John Herschel; On a new phenomenon of colour in certain specimens of Fluor Spar, by Sir D. Brewster; On the Helm Wind of Crossfell, by the Rev. J. Watson; On the variation of the quantities of Rain which falls in different pads of the Earth, by Dr. Smith; On Binocular Vision, and on the Stereoscope, an instrument for illustrating its phenomena, by Prof. Wheatstone (whose invention was highly commended by Sir D. Brewster and Sir John Herschel); and on a general Geometric Method, by the Rev. Charles Graves, F.T.C.D….…. Friday… four distinct papers on Vision, Light, and Diffraction, by Sir D. Brewster,…”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. New Publications. Antiquities.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Nov. 1838): 526. [Book notice. Hermes; or, Classical and Antiquarian Researches. By H. F. Talbot, esq….”]

1839

HENRY FOX.

“Literary and TALBOT, WILLIAM Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Jan. 1839): 80. [“…Nov. 30. The anniversary meeting took place, when the Marquis of Northampton was elected President, (vice the Duke of Sussex; resigned); John William Lubbock, eta,. M. A. Treasurer…; H.R.H. The Duke of Sussex, … Thomas Graham, esq., Sir John F. W. Herschel, bart. M.A.,…., and Rev. Robert Willis, M.A., Members of the Council. (The names printed in Italics, were not members of the last Council.) A Copley medal was awarded to M. Faraday, esq., and another to Prof. Gauss of Gottingen; the Rumford medal to Professor Forbes; and the Royal Medals to H. Fox Talbot, esq. and Professor Graham….”]

DAGUERRE.

“Fine Arts. The Daguerotype.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Feb. 1839): 185-186. [“A very extraordinary and important Invention has been made by M. Daguerre, one of the painters of the Diorama. It is a method of fixing the images which are represented at the back of a camera-obscura; so that these images are not the temporary reflection of objects, but their fixed and durable impress, which may be removed from the presence of those objects like a picture, and will multiply impressions as an engraving. M. Daguerre requires a plate of polished metal; he places it in his apparatus, and, in three minutes, if there is a bright summer sun, and a few more, if autumn or winter weaken the power of its beams, he takes it out, covered with a charming design, representing the object towards which the apparatus was turned. Nothing remains but a short chemical operation, and the design, which has been obtained in so few moments, remains unalterably fixed, so that the hottest sun cannot destroy it. The invention has been submitted to M. Arago, and he has made a report upon it to the Academy of Sciences, from which the following are extracts: “In the camera-obscura the image is perfectly defined when the lens is achromatic; the same precision is seen in the images obtained by M. Daguerre, which represent all objects with a degree of perfection which no designer, however skilful, can equal, and finished, in all the details, in a manner that exceeds belief. It is the light which forms the image, on a plate covered with a particular coating. The length of time required to execute this operation is, in our climate, and in ordinary weather, eight or ten minutes; but, under a pure sky, like that of Egypt, two, perhaps one minute, might suffice to execute the most complex design. “M. Daguerre has found a substance infinitely more sensible to the light than the chlorure of silver, which is altered in an inverse manner, that is to say, which leaves on the several parts of the plate, corresponding to the several parts of the object, dark tints for the shadowy, half tints for the lighter parts, and no tint whatever for the parts that are quite luminous. When this action of the light on the different parts of the plate has produced the desired effect, M. Daguerre stops it at once, and the design, which he withdraws from the camera-obscura, may be exposed to the full light of day without undergoing any alteration. “If we consider M. Daguerre’s discovery with respect to the utility which it may have in the sciences, it is evident that so sensible a re-agent as that which he has found, may enable us to make photometrical experiments, which have hitherto been reputed impossible. Such,” said M. Arago, ” are experiments on the light of the moon; which the Academy bad deemed of sufficient importance for it to appoint a committee, composed of M. de Laplace, M. Mains, and myself, to make them. The light of the moon is known to be 300,000 times weaker than that of the sun; yet we did not despair of obtaining some sensible effects, by means of a lens of very large dimensions. We made use of a very large lens, brought from Austria; and having placed some chlorure of silver in the focus, that being the most sensible re-agent known, not the slightest discolouration was perceptible. It occurred to me, that M. Daguerre might have more success with his new reagent; and, in fact, he obtained, in twenty minutes, on his dark ground, a white image of the moon, with a lens far less powerful than ours.” M. Biot has also added his testimony to the value of this discovery to the philosopher; and the celebrated artist, M. Paul Delaroche, has expressed his opinions that views taken in this manner, though destitute of colour, may give useful hints to the most skilful painters, in the manner of expressing by light and shade, not only the relief of objects, but the local tint; the same bas-relief in plaster and in marble will be differently represented in the two designs, and one can tell, at the first glance, which is the image of the plaster. The smallest folds of drapery are perceptible, as are the lines of a landscape invisible to the naked eye. With the aid of a glass we bring the distances near. In the mass of buildings, of accessories, of imperceptible traits, which compose a view of Paris taken from the Pont des Arts, we distinguish the smallest details; we count the paving stones; we see the humidity caused by the rain; we read the inscription on a shop sign. The effect becomes more astonishing if a microscope is employed. An insect of the size of a pea, the garden spider, enormously magnified by a solar microscope, is reflected in the same dimensions by the marvellous mirror, and with the most minute accuracy. It is manifest how useful M. Daguerre’s discovery will be in the study of natural history. In one instance three views of the same monument are taken; one in the morning, one at noon, and the other in the evening; and nobody will mistake the effect of the morning for that of the evening, though the sun’s altitude, and, consequently, the relative lengths of the shadows, are the same in both.”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Mar. 1839): 294-296. [“Jan. 31. J. W. Lubbock, esq. V.P. and Treas. in the chair. John Wesley Williams, esq. and James Yates, esq. were elected Fellows of the Society. The paper read was entitled ‘ Some account of the Art of Photogenic Drawing,’ by H. F. Talbot, esq. F.R.S. In this communication, the author states, that during the last four or five years .he has invented and brought to a considerable degree of perfection a process for copying the forms of natural objects by means of solar light, which is received upon paper previously prepared in a particular manner. He observes, that a prior attempt of this kind is recorded in the Journal of the Royal Institution for 1802; by which it appears, that the idea was originally suggested by Mr. Wedgwood, and afterward experimented on by Sir Humphry Davy. These philosophers found, that their principle, though theoretically true, yet failed in practice, on account of certain difficulties; the two principal of which were—first, that the paper could not be rendered sufficiently sensible to receive any impression whatever from the feeble light of a camera obscura; and secondly, that the pictures which were formed by the solar rays could not be preserved, owing to their still con- tinning to be acted upon by the light, Mr. Talbot states, that his experiments were begun without his being aware of this prior attempt; and that in the course of them he discovered methods of overcoming the two difficulties above related. With respect to the latter, he says, that he has found it possible, by a subsequent process, so to fix the images or shadows formed by the solar rays, that they become insensible to light, and consequently admit of being preserved during any length of time: as an example of which he mentions, that he has exposed some of his pictures to the sunshine for the space of an hour without injury. With respect to the other point, he states that he has succeeded in discovering a method of preparing the paper, which renders it much more sensitive to light than any which had been used previously, and by means of which he finds that there is no difficulty in fixing the pictures given by the camera obscura and by the solar microscope. In the summer of 1835 he made a great number of portraits of a house in the country, of ancient architecture (his own residence, Lacock Abbey), several of which he exhibited to the Society. After some speculations on the possibility of discovering a yet more sensitive paper, the author mentions, that the kind employed by him may be rendered so much so, as to become visibly affected by the full light of the sun in the space of half a second. The rest of this paper contains an account of various other ways in which this method may be employed in practice, according to the kind of object which it is required to copy; also, a brief mention of the great variety of effects resulting from comparatively small differences in the mode of preparing the paper; and of certain anomalies which occur in the process, the cause of which has not hitherto been rendered distinctly manifest. From this paper it appears that Mr. Talbot’s researches have brought him to a discovery almost identical with that of M. Daguerre, of which we gave some particulars in our last Number, p. 185. (We may here mention that we were not correct in one particular; M. Daguerre’s plates are mere pictures, not engravings.)” pp. 294-295.  “Feb. 21. J. G. Children, esq. V.P. Captain Arthur Conolly, and Lieut-Col. W. Reid, C.B. were elected Fellows. Three papers were read: 1. ‘An account of the processes used in Photogenic Draw, ing,’ by H. Fox Talbot, esq. F.R.S.; 2. ‘A description of an Hydropneumatic Baroscope,’ by J. T. Cooper, esq.; 3. The continuation of Mr. Darwin’s paper on the Parallel Roads of Glen Roy and other parts of Lochabar. In Mr. Talbot’s second paper, he has disclosed the whole of his interesting secret, with regard to the two important points, the preparation of photogenic paper, and the means of fixing the design. The paper selected for the purpose is of good quality and smooth, surface. Mr. Talbot dips it into a weak solution of common salt, and wipes it dry, by which the salt is uniformly distributed throughout its substance. He then spreads a solution of nitrate of silver on one surface only, and dries it at the fire. The solution should not be saturated, but six or eight times diluted with water. When dry, the paper is fit for use. He his found, by experiment, that there is a certain proportion between the quantity of salt and that of the solution of silver which answers best, and gives the maximum effect. If a sheet of paper, thus prepared, be taken and washed with a saturated solution of salt, and then dried, it will be found (especially if the paper has been kept some weeks before the trial is made) that its sensibility is greatly diminished, and, in some cases, seems quite extinct. But if it be again washed with a liberal quantity of the solution of silver, it becomes again sensible to light, and even more so than it was at first. In this way, by alternately washing the paper with salt and silver, and drying it between times, Mr. Talbot has succeeded in increasing its sensibility to the degree that is requisite for receiving the images of the camera obscure. With regard to the second object—that of fixing the images—Mr. Talbot observed, that, after having tried ammonia, and several other re-agents, with very imperfect success, the first which gave him a successful result, was the iodide of potassium, much diluted with water. If a photogenic picture is washed over with this liquid, an iodide of niter is formed, which is absolutely unalterable by sunshine. This process requires precaution: for, if the solution is too strong, it attacks the dark parts of the picture. It is requisite, therefore, to find, by trial, the proper proportions. The fixation of the pictures in this way, with proper management, is very beautiful and lasting. The specimen of lace, which Mr. Talbot exhibited to the Society, and which was made five years ago, was preserved in this manner. But his usual method of fixing is different from this, and somewhat simpler—or, at least, requiring less nicety. It consists in immersing the picture in a strong solution of common salt, and then wiping off the superfluous moisture, and drying it. It is sufficiently singular that the same substance which is so useful in giving sensibility to the paper, should also be capable, under other circumstances, of destroying it; bet such is, nevertheless, the fact. Now, if the picture which has been thus washed and dried, is placed in the mm, the white parts colour themselves of a pale lilac tint, after which they become insensible. Numerous experiments have shown the author that the depth of this lilac tint varies according to the quantity of salt used, relatively to the quantity of silver: but by properly adjusting these, the images may, if desired, be retained of an absolute whiteness. He mentions, also, that those preserved by iodine are always of a very pale primrose yellow, which has the extraordinary and very remarkable property of turning to a full gaudy yellow, whenever it is exposed to the beat of a fire, and recovering its former colour again, when it is cold.” pp. 295-296.]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX. see also HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN. (GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, Apr. 1839)

HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Apr. 1839): 413. [“…March 14. J. W. Lubbock, esq. V.P. … Read, 1. An experimental Inquiry into the formation of Alkaline and Earthy bodies, with reference to their presence in plants, the influence of carbonic acid in their generation, and the equilibrium of this gas in the atmosphere, by Robert Rigg, esq.; 2. Note on the art of Photography, or the application of the chemical rays of light to the purposes of pictorial representation, by Sir John F. W. Herschel, Bart. The subject was discussed in its chemical relations; and, after noticing various promising experiments, the writer states that confining his attention, in the first instance, to the employment of chloride of silver, he proceeded to inquire into the methods by which the blackened traces can be preserved. This may be effected, he observes, by the application of any liquid capable of dissolving and washing off the unchanged chloride, but of leaving the reduced, or oxide of silver, untouched. These conditions are best fulfilled by the liquid hyposulphites. Pure water will fix the photograph, by washing out the nitrate of silver, but the tint of the picture resulting is brick-red; but the black colour may be restored, by washing it over with a weak solution of hyposulphite of ammonia. The author found that paper impregnated with the chloride of silver was only slightly susceptible to the influence of light; but an accidental observation led him to the discovery of other salts of silver, in which the acid, being more volatile, adheres to the base by a weak affinity, and which impart much greater sensibility to the paper on which they are applied—such as the carbonate, the nitrate, and the acetate. The nitrate requires to be perfectly neutral; for the least excess of acid lower*, in a remarkable degree, its susceptibility. In the application of photographic processes to the copying of engravings or drawing, many precautions are required. In the first transfers, both light and shadow, <is well as right and left, are the reverses of the original; and to operate a second transfer, or by a double inversion to reproduce the original effect, is a matter of great difficulty. He noticed a curious phenomenon respecting the action of light on nitrated paper; namely, its great increase of intensity under a certain kind of glass strongly pressed in contact with it it —an effect which cannot be explained either by the reflection of light, or the presence of moisture, but which may possibly be dependant on the evolution of heat. Twenty-three specimens of photographs made by Sir John Herschell accompanied this paper; one a sketch of his telescope at Slough, fixed from its image in a lens, and the rest copies of engravings and drawings, some reverse, or first transfers, and others second transfers, or re-reversed pictures.” “March 21. The President in the chair. Read, An account of the fall of a meteoric star, on the 13th of October last; An account of a barometer constructed by S. B. Hewlett, esq.; And a further communication from H. T. Talbot, esq. F. S. A. describing a new kind of sensitive paper for photogenic drawing. Mr. Talbot mentioned, in his memoir read lately before the Society, he had omitted to give the details of a method by which etchings on copper might be successfully imitated. This may be done by covering a sheet of glass with a solution of resin in turpentine, and afterwards smoking it by the flame of a candle; and upon the blacked surface the drawing is made with a needle, or other fine-pointed instrument. A sheet of the sensitive paper being placed under it, a perfect copy is obtained.”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Domestic Occurrences. Births.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Apr. 1839): 427-428. [“…Feb. … 24. In Queen Ann st. The wife of H. E. Talbot, esq. of Lacock Abbey, a dau….” p. 428.]

DAGUERRE.

“Foreign News. France.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Apr. 1839): 424-425. [“The result of the elections in France having been decidedly against the Ministers, they all resigned, and Marshal Soult was sent for by the King, and entrusted with the power to negotiate with the Coalition…” “…A fire broke out in the Paris Diorama on the 8th March; and, notwithstanding an abundant supply of water, it was soon evident that there was no chance of stopping the force of the conflagration. The paintings on exhibition were the Sermon, the Temple of Solomon, and the Valley of Golclau, which, with another nearly ready to be put up, were all destroyed. A wall, eighty feet high, fell on the buildings of a waggon-office, burying in a cloud of dust and smoke three firemen who were on the roof. Two of them came out of the ruins unhurt; but a third had his leg broken, and a waggon-man was wounded at the same time. The fire is supposed to have originated in the room called the Salle de Boulevart, where M. Daguerre was preparing another painting for exhibition, representing the interior of the church of Santa Maria Maggiora. Notwithstanding all the exertions made, three houses adjoining the Diorama were partially destroyed. This disaster will impede M. Daguerre’s experiments on his new discovery.”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. New Publications. Divinity.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (May 1839): 523. [Book notice. The Antiquity of the book of Genesis, illustrated by some new Arguments. By H. Fox Talbot, Esq., F. R. S.”]

HAVELL, J. F. & WILLMORE.

“Fine Arts. The Photogenic Art.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (June 1839): 631. [“Mr. J. F. Havell and Mr. Willmore (engravers) have, by covering glass with etching ground and smoke, sketched designs upon it. Through the glass thus exposed by the scratch, the photogenic paper receives the light, and the design, which the sun may be said to print, may be multiplied with perfect identity! The size of designs thus produced need no longer be kept down by that of the printing-press, as the glass can alone limit the size of the design. It is reported that Mr. Havell and his brother have succeeded in giving same true colours, also, to their productions, by the action of light. Beautiful imitations of washed bistre drawings may be produced by slopping out the light on the glass by black varnish, which will obstruct the transmission of light in proportion to the thickness with which the varnish is laid on; and specimens like fine mezzotinto prints have been produced by this process.”]

BY COUNTRY. 1839.

Jackson & Chatto. “Treatise on Wood Engraving.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Aug. 1839): 107-125 . 9 illus.[(Background.) Book review . A Treatise on Wood Engraving, Historical and Practical. With upwards of three hundred Illustrations, engraved on wood. By John Jackson, Royal 8vo. pp. 750.]

DAGUERRE.

“Fine Arts. The Daguerrotype” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Sept. 1839): 289-290. [“We have given as full an account as our space would allow of the progress of the Photogenic art, both in France and England. In our Feb. number,* (* In page 185, near the foot of the first column, erase the words, “and will multiply impressions as an engraving.”) p. 185, is an abstract of M. Arago’s first memoir, read before the Academy of Sciences at Paris, on the invention of M. Daguerre. Since that period the invention has been purchased by the French Government; a yearly pension of (6000 francs having been settled on M. Daguerre, and another of 4000 francs on M. Niepce, the son of the gentleman (deceased) by whose experiments the invention was originally suggested. On the 19th Aug. M. Arago at length divulged the secret in a very crowded meeting of the Academic des Sciences. The process is as follows: a plate of copper thinly coated with silver is washed with a solution of nitric acid, for the purpose of cleansing its surface, and especially to remove the minute traces of copper, which the layer of silver may contain. This washing must be done with the greatest care, attention, and regularity. M. Daguerre has observed, that better results are obtained from copper plated with silver, than from pure silver; whence it may be surmised, that electricity may be concerned in the action. After this preliminary preparation, the metallic plate is exposed, in a well-closed box, to the action of the vapour of iodine, with certain precautions. A small quantity of iodine is placed at the bottom of the box, with a thin gauze between it and the plate, as it were, to sift the vapour, and to diffuse it equally. It is also necessary to surround the plate with a small metallic frame, to prevent the vapour of iodine from condensing in larger quantities round the margin than in the centre; the whole success of the operation depending on the perfect uniformity of the layer of ioduret of silver thus formed. The exact time to withdraw the sheet of plated copper from the vapour, is indicated by the plate assuming a yellow colour. M. Dumas, who has endeavoured to ascertain the thickness of this deposit, states that it cannot be more than the millionth part of a millimetre. The plate thus prepared is placed in the dark chamber of the camera dbscura, and preserved with great care from the faintest action of light. It is, in fact, so sensitive, that exposure for a tenth of a second is more than sufficient to make impression on it. At the bottom of the dark chamber, which M. Daguerre has reduced to small dimensions, is a plate of ground glass, which advances or recedes until the image of the object to be represented is perfectly clear and distinct. When this is gained, the prepared plate is substituted for the ground glass, and receives the impression of the object. The effect is produced in a very short time. When the metallic plate is withdrawn, the impression is hardly to be seen, the action of a second vapour being necessary to bring it out distinctly: the vapour of mercury is employed for this purpose. It is remarkable, that the metallic plate, to be properly acted upon by the mercurial vapour, must be placed at a certain angle. To this end, it is enclosed in a third box, at the bottom of which is placed a small dish filled with mercury. If the picture is to be viewed in a vertical position, as is usually the case with engravings, it must receive the vapour of mercury at an angle of about 45″. If, on the contrary, it is to be viewed at that angle, the plate must be arranged in the box in a horizontal position. The volatilization of the mercury must be assisted by a temperature of 60° of Reaumur (or 167° of Fahrenheit). After these three operations, for the completion of the process, the plate must be plunged into a solution of hypo-sulphite of soda. This solution acts most strongly on the parts which have been uninfluenced by light j the reverse of the mercurial vapour, which attacks exclusively that portion which has been acted on by the rays of light. From this it might perhaps be imagined, that the lights are formed by the amalgamation of the silver with mercury, and the shadows by the sulphuret of silver formed by the hypo-sulphite. M. Arago, however, formally declared the positive inability of the combined wisdom of physical, chemical, and optical science, to offer any theory of these delicate and complicated operations, which might be even tolerably rational and satisfactory. The picture now produced is washed in distilled water, to give it that stability which is necessary to its bearing exposure to light without undergoing any further change. The art of fixing the colours of objects has not hitherto been accomplished; and another important desideratum is, the means of rendering the picture unalterable by friction. The substance of the pictures executed by the Daguerrotype is, in fact, so little solid—is so slightly deposited on the surface of the metallic plate, that the least friction destroys it, like a drawing in chalk: and at present, it is necessary to cover it with glass.”]

DAGUERRE.

J. R. “The Historian Gibbon.—His Autobiography.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Nov. 1839): 465-482. [“…In respect to Carnot, Lord Brougham particularly refers to the “Eloge Historique de Carnot,” by M. Arago, which, however, from its professed purpose, can hardly be an impartial record. Yet, with the exception of the two circumstances, which, like Nelson’s abberrations at Naples, are indelible spots on his life, he was fully entitled to the high praise bestowed on him by the distinguished academician who, like Footenelle and Bailly, accumulate and so ably executes such a variety of scientific functions. Of this eminent man, whom I have heard, both at the Chamber of Deputies, and the Institute, I recollect a saying, generally allusive to those who” write and do not publish, but especially pointed «t his colleague, M. Royer Collard, the chief of the Doctrinaires, who has seldom appeared in print, though known to have composed much, ” Je n’aime point les auteurs en poche.” His recent “Eloge Historique” of Watts is an admirable homage to our great countryman, while he does not appear quite so equitable in adjudicating the respective claims of England and France to the photographic discovery, as his Report to the Chamber of Deputies in support of a demand for pensions to M. Daguerre and M. Niepce, may show. At an after period, Carnot published his own defence:—Response de L. N. M. Carnot au Rapport de J. C. Dallieul. Paris, an. 6 (1798).* (*I cannot conceive a more appropriate designation for our national Bard than that of “The Photographic Painter of Nature;” to borrow an image and apply it in analogy of character, to Nature’s best interpreter, from the great discovery, Which, like him, traces with unerring delicacy of transcript, and perfect accuracy of delineation, her minutest, and, to the ordinary eye, imperceptible workings.”]

DAGUERRE.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. New Publications. Fine Arts” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Nov. 1839): 521. [Book notice. History and Description of the Processes of the Daguerreotype and Diorama, illustrated with Plates by the Author, M. Daguerre, with M. Arago’s Report to the Chamber of Deputies. Translated by John S. Memes, LL.D. 8vo. 3s. 6d.]

1840

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Promotions, Preferments, &c. Sheriffs Appointed For 1840.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Mar. 1840): 312. [“…Wilts-W. H. F. Talbot, Lacock Abbey, esq….”]

HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Apr. 1840): 407. [“…Feb. 27. The Marq. of Northampton, Pres.—William Jory Henwood, esq. was elected Fellow.—A paper was partly read, entitled, On the chemical action of the rays of the Solar Spectrum on preparations of Silver, and other substances, both metallic and non-metallic; and on some Photographic processes; by Sir John F. W. Herschel, Bart….”]

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Miscellaneous Reviews.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (June. 1840): 622. [Book review. Hermes; or, Classical and Antiquarian Researches. By Henry Fox Talbot, Esq. F.R.S. 1838.— The Antiquity of the Book of Genesis. By the same. 1839.—The former of these works contains some very curious and learned disquisitions and ingenious conjectures on the origin of various words and names in the Latin language. The object of the latter is to show that the knowledge of the book of Genesis existed among nations that are commonly believed to have been ignorant of it, especially the Phrygians. We have received both pleasure and instruction from it, and we recommend both these tracts to the consideration of scholars.

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Horticultural Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (June 1840): 630. [“…Both Reports were unanimously adopted; and the meeting then proceeded to the election of officers for the ensuing year, when his Grace the Duke of Devonshire was re-elected President, T. Edgar, Esq. Treasurer, and G. Bentham, Esq. Secretary; and E. Foster, Esq. J. Rogers, Jan. Esq. and W. H. F. Talbot, Esq. were elected into the Council, in the room of Sir O. Mosley, Bart. E. Barnard, Esq. and H. Bevan, Esq. retiring.”]

1841

BIOT. see also HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN.. (GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, Jan. 1841)

WHEATSTONE, PROF. see also HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN.. (GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE, Jan. 1841)

HERSCHEL, SIR JOHN..

“Literary and Scientific Intelligence. Royal Society.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Jan. 1841): 78. [“The following distribution of medals took place at the Anniversary Meeting on the 30th Nov.—One of the royal medals was awarded to Sir John F. W. Herschel, Bart. V.P.R.S., for his paper, entitled, “On the Chemical Action of Rays of the Solar Spectrum, on preparations of Silver and other substances, both metallic and non-metallic, and on some Photogenic Processes,” published in the Philosophical Transactions for 1840. The other royal medal was awarded to Charles Wheatstone, Esq. F.R.S., for his paper, entitled, “Contributions to the Physiology of Vision,” published in the Philosophical Transactions for 1838. The Rumford medal was awarded to M. Biot, of Paris, For. Mem. R. S., for his researches in and connected with the Circular Polarization of Light….”]

HAVELL, JOHN. (d. 1841)

“Deaths.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Mar. 1841): 327-335. [“…Mr. John Havell, the engraver, who has been long a respected and distinguished member of his profession. On the first announcement of Daguerre’s discovery, Mr. Havell was so forcibly struck by the photogenic effects, that he applied himself with much assiduity to effect improvements on the discovery. With a view of exhibiting some successful experiments he invited to his house a limited circle of friends, in the midst of whom he was surprised by the fearful visitation of the loss of his reason, which he never fully recovered.”]

HUNT, ROBERT.

“New Publications. Fine Arts.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (July 1841): 73. [Book notice. Popular Treatise on the Art of Photography, including Daguerreotype, and all the New Methods of producing Pictures by the Chemical Agency of Light. With 30 Engravings. By Robert Hunt. 3s. 6d.]

1842

TALBOT, WILLIAM HENRY FOX.

“Promotions and Preferments. Births.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (Mar. 1842): 320-321. [“…Feb… 5. At Lacock Abbey, Wilts, the wife of H Talbot, esq. a son and heir,…” p. 321.]

COLLEN.

“Photographic Portraiture on Paper.” GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE (May 1842): 526. [“Through the calotype process likenesses are now produced by the camera obscura, upon paper prepared with chemical combinations of silver. The lightest part of the object is thus represented by black on the paper in the camera, whilst the darkest part makes no impression on the paper. This reversed picture (for such it is) is laid on another prepared paper, and is submitted to the influence of light, which passing through the first, blackens the paper underneath in those parts which had not been affected in the camera operation, and the result obtained is an exact reverse of effect. These likenesses, which are produced by Mr. Collen, of Somerset-street, may be multiplied to any extent.”]

Etc., Etc.